Instant-messaging spam--or "spim", as it's often called--is beginning its march into the corporate world. Spim isn't nearly the headache that e-mail spam has become, largely because instant messaging isn't as ubiquitous as e-mail in corporate settings and because the closed nature of IM networks makes IM spammers easier to catch. But experts predict that unwanted IMs have the potential to wreak just as much havoc as spam.
So far we're told by customers that [spim] is not a big problem. But we find it hard to imagine that it's not going to turn into a tremendous issue, says Sara Radicati, principal analyst at The Radicati Group. Radicati reports that 26 percent of companies are using IM as a corporate service, and that 44 percent say employees use IM but it isn't a company standard. Security Worries. Financial companies are known for their heavy use of instant messaging, but Lee Blackmore, director of IT at Stifel Nicolaus, says he was surprised to learn how widespread IM use was at the Midwestern brokerage house. He was about to ban all use of IM for fear of security breaches that the service can cause, but the company's institutional traders put up a fuss. Instead, he agreed to let the company's 175 traders use any IM service they like--and he installed IMlogic's IM Manager to control and secure communications.
News source: computercops.biz
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