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January 9, 2002 at 6:00 am #16093
BigBlueBall News
MemberNetwork World Fusion
January 9, 2002
The market for secure, business-grade instant messaging software is picking up steam, with several start-ups now offering packages that automatically encrypt real-time chat sessions between users. However, these packages do not yet offer secure communications with users of popular consumer-oriented IM systems from AOL, Microsoft and others.
Among the new entrants into the corporate IM software market is JabCast, which in December shipped the JabCast Secure Realtime Communications client/server software suite to trial customers including several law firms. JabCast SRC provides end-to-end encryption of instant messages without a noticeable time lag, company officials say.
JabCast faces a slew of rivals including Bantu, divine Software, Ikimbo and Jabber that are all angling for a share of the rapidly growing corporate IM market.
The number of corporate IM users will increase tenfold in the next four years, according to IDC. IDC pegs the number of global corporate IM users at 18.4 million this year and predicts that figure will grow to 229.2 million in 2005. IDC asserts that the amount of money companies pay for IM will grow from $133 million to $1.1 billion over the same time frame.
“WeŒre very bullish on corporate IM,” says Robert Mahowald, senior analyst for IDCŒs Collaborative Computing group. “About 70% of companies have employees that use consumer IM services, and [network executives] are becoming much more aware of the challenges of consumer IM services including security.”
Mahowald says consumer IM services create well-documented security problems in corporate networks, including the ability for an intruder to drop a worm behind a firewall. He also says the use of consumer IM services in the workplace prevent the capture of important information into knowledge management systems. By migrating to business-grade IM systems, companies can solve these problems and take advantage of the integration of IM and presence information into other applications, such as CRM, ERP and voice over IP.
“WeŒre seeing more [network executives] saying theyŒre going to go ahead and spend the money especially as IM gets linked via presence detection to other networks,” he says.
Interest in a secure IM system from one of its corporate customers is what prompted biometric ID card manufacturer SyntheSys Secure Technologies to create JabCast and launch a new company to market it. The customer asked SyntheSys to migrate the Jabber open source IM technology from Linux to Windows and to beef up its security.
“Our customer had a problem where somebody from their IT department was snooping on instant messages between the personnel department and CEO of the company about layoffs,” says William Tabor, a principal technologist at JabCast. “They came to us and asked if we could make the technology secure.”
The end result – JabCast SRC – runs on Linux, Unix, Windows NT/2000 and Compaq OpenVMS. JabCast is a client/server software system that encrypts messages at the client. The server software maintains a database of messages for administrative purposes, but the messages are encrypted there to prevent unauthorized access.
“The keys are generated at the server and given to the client, so the end user doesnŒt even know theyŒre doing encryption,” Tabor says.
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