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ABI: Enterprise Rights Management of Critical Importance

July 2, 2008 // Published as a news service by IHS

 
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According to ABI Research, the importance of enterprise rights management (ERM) is found in our daily news:
  • A U.S. government consultant accesses the passwords of 38,000 FBI employees.
  • The U.K. department of Revenue and Customs loses discs containing personal information of 25 million Britons.
  • Laptops containing sensitive data - in one case the Social Security numbers of up to 26 million U.S. military veterans - seem to be lost or stolen with alarming regularity.

"The confidential data held by businesses and other organizations has never been more critical or less secure, especially in light of the trend to outsourcing and offshoring," said ABI Research industry analyst Zippy Aima. "Until recently, many companies were rather unaware of the need for higher security.

"Now, however, the consequences of data loss - compromised commercial strategies, financial liability, tarnished brand image, violation of government regulations and more - are better understood, and the market for enterprise rights management [ERM] is growing steadily, with expected revenues of $450 million in 2013."

The manufacturing, financial, health care, government and life sciences sectors are ERM early adopters, analysts said.

ERM operates at the level of the individual document, generally using a client-server model to attach rights and restrictions to specific files. Analysts said at least one vendor has also hinted at offering ERM as a hosted service. While the technologies involved are not revolutionary or radically different from one another, vendors are constantly adding new features and supporting more file formats.

Just five large firms - market leader Microsoft, EMC Corporation, Oracle and Adobe - and one smaller one - Liquid Machines - serve the world's ERM demand.

Analysts said EMC Corporation and Oracle entered the market by acquiring Authentica and Stellent respectively; Stellent had previously acquired a digital rights management (DRM) company called SealedMedia. Although ERM implementations are found in Asia and Europe, the bulk of demand and revenue come from the U.S.

"ABI Research expects stable and robust ERM market growth," said Aima. "The next few years probably represent the strongest growth potential, before ERM becomes commoditized."

Source: ABI Research.

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