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Skype Slowing Moving Into The Corporate World

There are many good reasons why Skype is slowly making its way into the corporate world: It’s free, and you can forget about country codes, telephone numbers, and long-distance bills. With a mouse click, you’re talking, or even video­conferencing, with any of the 170 million Skype users worldwide. But there are also good reasons why corporate IT views Skype skeptically. For starters, it can be a bandwidth hog. Another problem: Most security products don’t yet monitor Skype traffic, meaning that Skype’s file-transfer capability may make an end-run around your company’s firewall. Now Skype is vying to address these concerns.

Consider the case at Holly Corp.: The petroleum refiner blocked Skype outright when it first noticed employees sneaking the software onto the corporate network two years ago. “We started noticing that bandwidth was not available,” says Paul Sheth, network and systems lead with Holly. “And before it started causing a problem that people would notice, we blocked it.”

Up until recently, pulling the plug was the only way corporate IT could control the software, but lately eBay, Skype’s parent company, has been jazzing up Skype so that people like Sheth will take a second look.

Skype connects with the enterprise | InfoWorld | News | 2007-03-16 | By Robert McMillan, IDG News Service

   

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