Your company scans incoming e-mail for viruses and outgoing messages for confidential information. Your spam filter snags most of the garbage, and it gets better as it learns the latest spamming and phishing spoofs. You're encrypting sensitive e-mail now, and you recently completed a project that keeps your messages safely archived in case federal regulators come knocking.
Indeed, with the right technology, the right policies and a little slice of your budget, you can pretty much manage the messaging madness. And new technology likely to emerge from the labs in the next year or two will help bring a little more civilization to the world of e-mail, ensuring its continued place among the most popular and important of all corporate applications.
However, e-mail's problems will accompany it into its second act, especially as users deploy a growing variety of mobile devices and discover new ways of communicating -- such as instant messaging, blogs, wikis and virtual reality spaces you've never even dreamed of. These will offer green pastures for hackers, spammers and phishers, and will require a whole new round of defensive tools, techniques and policies.
While today's efforts to improve e-mail are aimed mostly at curing its ills, research in vendor and university labs points to brave new uses for the humble e-mail message, from knowledge mining to workflow enhancement. Interviews with researchers, futurists and IT managers yielded the following conclusions about the future of e-mail.
1. New technologies, plus economic and political pressures, will eventually tame the malware.
Ray Tomlinson, a principal engineer at BBN Technologies, calls the struggle against spam, phishing and malware "pretty much a draw" at present. He has a good deal of perspective on these issues, having sent the world's first network e-mail message in 1971.
Tomlinson points with hope, but some exasperation, to alternate -- some would say competing -- proposals for stemming the tide of offensive, malicious and deceptive e-mail.
"It's not so much a hard technical problem; it's a hard business and political problem," Tomlinson says. "The players have vested interests in the various approaches, and they are fighting tooth and nail to get their approaches adopted. It's not the end users who are the bottleneck here."
Microsoft is pushing its Sender ID Framework, which verifies that a message was actually sent from a server authorized to send mail for the domain owner. John Scarrow, Microsoft's general manager of antispam and antiphishing strategy, says Sender ID has been adopted by 73 percent of Fortune 100 companies and is used for 31 percent of all e-mail messages.
"We are seeing the amount of spam now starting to plateau," he says. "It's a good indication the industry is starting to take a good bite out of the economics of the business."
More good news, Scarrow says, is that while IM and other modes of electronic communication also need to be protected, the technology for doing so is similar to that for e-mail.
Meanwhile, Yahoo and Cisco Systems last year submitted to the Internet Engineering Task Force a proposed standard called DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM), which, like Sender ID, is designed to guard against spoofing and phishing by authenticating an e-mail sender. DKIM verifies the domain of the sender and also cryptographically verifies the integrity of the message.
In addition to Sender ID, Microsoft has the SmartScreen filter, which uses statistical techniques to learn what's spam and what isn't, and the Phishing Filter add-in for the MSN Search Toolbar. But those tools are not enough, say the folks at Microsoft Research, where some 40 people work on new e-mail technology.
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Computerworld Live Podcast #97: The Future of Enterprise Networking 25/07/2008 09:45:36
This week CW Live chats with Mark Thompson, global sales and marketing manager for HP ProCurve, on the future of the enterprise networking. Mark discusses the trends we can expect to see in the near future and how the right infrastructure can ensure your enterprise network is secure. - +
Computerworld Live Podcast #96: Security at the Edge 11/06/2008 09:22:22
CW Live speaks with Amol Mitra, HP ProCurve Director of Marketing for Asia Pacific and Japan. Today's topic: how enterprises are starting to shift away from simply controlling security via server logins, firewalls and moving to more adaptive security frameworks. - +
Data Management Edition #10: Multi-Petascale Systems 02/05/2008 09:12:33
This week we look at sustainability and the development of multicore technologies to build multi-petascale systems. - +
IT Security Edition #11: How to poison the Storm botnet 01/05/2008 08:51:55
This week CW Live presents a case study on how to poison the notorious Storm botnet . Plus we take a look at Cisco's plans for Ironport. - +
IT Security Edition #10: Cyber-battles fought and won 24/04/2008 11:09:47
Vendors bow to end user pressure to improve product security, and we take a look at the latest concepts shaping the cyber-battlefield of the future.
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IT Service Management Needs and Adoption Trends: An Analysis of a Global Survey of IT Executives
IT executives face the need to improve service delivery with limited resource increases. Two common strategies for achieving this are network and systems management tools and datacenter consolidation. Read on to disocover how you can make a strong business case for IT Consolidation.












