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Beware of the 'electronic butler' in 2008

Beware of the 'electronic butler' in 2008

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 22 Jan 2008 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

As people post information on Facebook and make online purchases, fraud will be the biggest IT issue this year, according to Deloitte Research Canada. Plus: Why COBOL programmers shouldn’t fear for their jobs

TORONTO -- Both enterprises and consumers will catch up to the reality of technological change that is the “double-edged sword” this year, according to Deloitte’s Technology, Media & Telecommunications (TMT) predictions for 2008.

The annual list was compiled from 6,000 respondents globally including Deloitte staff and industry analysts.

Several predictions were announced in the areas of data security and privacy, including a growing industry around digital protection especially given the plummeting prices of mobile devices that are easily lost or stolen. “Hardware is disposable but the data on it is priceless,” said Duncan Stewart, co-author of the report and head of Deloitte Canada Research, at the Toronto event announcing the annual predictions.

Fraud will be the biggest issue this year as people willingly exchange anonymity for usefulness of the Web, said Stewart, who cited social networking platforms like Facebook where members readily expose their identity.

Along the same vein, while online purchases are often made easy with historical personal information stored by retailers, that “electronic butler” might turn into a stalker. User pushback, rather than governmental regulation will be the new control mechanism.

In the same area, there will be a continued and perhaps stronger crack down on online piracy with measures like better digital rights management technology, tougher copyright laws and heftier fines.

Location will continue to matter for global positioning system (GPS) technology to be successful. Although falling GPS chipset prices have allowed cell phone manufacturers to integrate the technology, this doesn’t mean that they should integrate it nor is it entirely useful for consumers.

From ComputerWorld

Firms face the Cobol crunch

The issue of identifying and retaining skilled IT professionals will continue to exist in 2008, but there will be renewed interest around retaining COBOL programmers as “legacy becomes the future”. A large number of Fortune 500 companies continue to perform transactions on legacy systems, noted Stewart.

Vendors who target mobile devices to the older generation will reap significant return on investment. Companies can make telecom and technology accessible to this under-developed market with things like bigger buttons and fonts, and better ergonomics.

The line between traditional and online media will continue to blur. Although this is already the case in Canada, it hasn’t caught on globally, said Stewart. Big legal battles in the online world will test libel laws around whether “citizen journalism” sites are legally responsible for what they post.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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