Latest Featured Articles There are few technologies out there that don't have privacy concerns. Recently, privacy experts turned their eyes to Web-based real time communications technology to see if WebRTC can be used to track its users. The increased value of data, coupled with the more potential access points for that data, will make things difficult for the corporations of a decade out. Yet businesses will be hard-pressed to just shut down remote access in the face of a workforce that wants flexibility on hand for fear of losing access to the best talent in the field. Businesses that want to compete in the field of 2025 may have little choice but to ramp up security and hope for the best; it would also be worthwhile to stop looking so hard at perimeter security and instead consider encryption. Stopping every breach in its tracks may be a forlorn hope, but making data unusable is a comparatively simpler matter. Although the adoption rate of WebRTC is not the same in Europe as it is in the US, the technology's benefits are now being recognized by individual users, businesses and service providers. According to European Computer Telecoms AG (ECT), an unnamed Scandinavian service provider has ordered its complete line of WebRTC solution. GENBAND's KANDY - a platform-as-a-service that allows service providers to expose network resources for use by developers building real-time communications into their applications - has 15 million users and more than 50 ecosystem partners. Top Stories Featured Resources Featured Channels Advertise With Us Become a WebRTC columnist! Become a WebRTC World columnist! Want to contribute your thought leadership and expertise around this exciting new collaboration technology to a rapidly growing audience? Become a writer, blogger or columnist for the WebRTC World and this newsletter. Contact Erik Linask, Group Editorial Director, at elinask@tmcnet.com for details. |
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar