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We
become what we behold. We shape our tools, and thereafter,
our tools shape us. Marshall McLuhan
If
youve been a reader of Express Computer right
from its beginnings in the early nineties, youd know
that we were the first publication in India to get clued in
to the Internet, in terms of utilising its vast resources
as a reference repository to help enrich our content. Those
were the days when Usenet, Gopher, Veronica, Archie and Lynx
ruled the roost. We were among the privileged few outside
academia who were granted access to the Net via the NCST servers
on ERNET. And we used it wisely. For instance, I remember
being in frequent touch with prominent security experts through
the Risks Forum on Usenetit helped make
one of our early special issues on Data Security a real blockbuster.
We were also the first to introduce a regular column focused
on the potential of the Internet. It went under the quaint
name Internauting, and was written by Rajesh Jain,
the man destined to become Indias first domestic dotcom
billionaire when years later in November 1999 he sold his
Indiaworld websites to Satyam Infoway for Rs 499 crore ($115
million)an event that heralded the official arrival
of the dotcom bubble into the country.
Back then, surfing the Net was an arduous task, what with
engaged tones, dropped carriers and minuscule bandwidth. Even
so, the huge value addition that accrued for our newsmagazinethrough
being in touch with global tech doyens via Usenet and e-mailmade
it all worthwhile.
Things are different now. We have much more bandwidth because
of leased lines; and most everyones connected all the
time, with a couple of extra dial-up connections thrown in
for emergencies as well. Our internal communications across
the country are efficient and cost-effective via e-mail, many
of our external interviews are conducted wholly on e-mail,
the Web is the ultimate reference resource, etc, etc. Indeed,
its impossible to imagine running a publication like
Express Computer without always-on Net connectivity.
But theres a price to pay. Its a dilemma being
faced by companies all over the world today. Sure the Net
adds a heck of a lot of value, but theres a flip side
as well: employees check professional and personal e-mail
a gazillion times a day and feel compelled to reply to each
one immediately; although Instant Messenger is a great communications
tool, its also an instant and constant distraction,
in addition to being a security nightmare and a bandwidth
hog when employees connect to high-traffic chat rooms; blatant
downloads of streaming audio and video by idle staff make
the Web crawl for others in the company doing genuine stuff;
then theres online shopping, frivolous surfing of personal
interest sites, endless accessing of news and current affairs
sites in the name of updating ones knowledge, visits
to porn sites, online banking and investingthe list
just goes on and on and on. Yes, Net surfing is the niftiest
way to aimlessly while away time since chewing the cud and
shooting the breeze. The difference is that the latter two
were rarely done at work.
The problem has got to a stage that it now merits its own
nameCyberslacking. Theres even a site dedicated
to cyberslackersits called ishouldbeworking.com
and proclaims to be the best place for slackers, goof-offs,
procrastinators, loafers, long-lunchers and Web-addicted
employees worldwide. And were not talking small potatoes
here; studies show that companies are losing billions of dollars
to recreational surfing and e-mail/IM chit-chatting by employees
at work. Gartner estimates that non-work-related surfing costs
US companies $54 billion in productivity loss every year.
And as more and more companies around the world are now routinely
providing a majority of employees with Net access, other countries
will soon catch up with or surpass these loss figures.
So whats the solution? No ones suggesting that
we need to throw the orange out along with the peel. Instead
theres a critical need for every company to develop
an acceptable use policy for the Internet. Not
only would this save the organisation time and money, but
it also might save considerable embarrassment and perhaps
even litigation somewhere down the road. Going with the New
Age credo of Trust, but verify, in addition to
an Internet Access Policy (IAP) it might also be necessary
to put in place monitoring and filtering software. In fact,
theres a whole new industry emerging out there, which
goes by the name of Employee Internet Management, and which,
according to IDC, is expected to grow to $600 million in the
US by 2004.
But ultimately, technology alone is not going to make cyberslacking
go away. Employees need to be made clearly aware of the fact
that personal use of the Internet at work is a privilege rather
than a right. Its a management issue, really. A recent
survey found that over 80 percent of US corporations have
some form of IAP in place. And very soon well have an
IAP of our own too here at Express Computer. Thatll
happen when I get down to formulating it; but first, Ive
gotta go check my e-mail ...
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Val Souza, Editor
valsouza@expresscomputeronline.com
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