The X-economy has five tenets, he said:
-- New generations of Internet users will expect highly filtered information and the ability to extract value from that information. --Move it or lose it. Latency, the luxury of sedately contemplating opportunities and one's reactions to those opportunities, is dead. In a time-based X-economy, the greatest value will come from coordinating an ever-increasing volume of opportunities with an ever-decreasing duration of the opportunities. -- The X-economy will be a community, not merely a market, requiring business-to-business marketplaces to foster a sense of trust, intimacy, and reliability. -- A demand chain, not a supply chain, will drive the X-economy. This will force "liquidity" upon marketplaces. Koulopoulos said that "liquidity causes the product or service to morph to fit the demand." -- Brand loyalty is so 1999. Businesses must demonstrate loyalty to customers by knowing and quickly fulfilling their needs. The role of marketplaces themselves will change, he said, from that of a me-too fad to a critical business operation. Profitability of marketplaces aside, they will become part of the cost of doing business. "This is not a payback play, it's a pressure play," Koulopoulos said.
Application Security’s Role in FISMA Compliance
The Federal Information Security Management Act of 2002 provides a comprehensive framework for ensuring effective information security controls for all federal information and assets. The Act aims to bolster computer and network security within the Federal Government by mandating periodic audits. Based on this...

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