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Instant messaging: the
problems of success
By Scott Bradner
Instant messaging is coming on like gangbusters in the enterprise networks and with its success come some of the burdens of that success. Burdens that include deciding weather to monitor or archiving of the messages and the disruption organizational boundaries.
The number 2 link under "other top news" on the
CNN.com website this morning (April 14) was a story with the title "Interest in IM monitoring on the rise." The story's subtitle was "Instant messages
aren't always fleeting." The
story was mostly about companies starting to realize that they need to start
treating instant messages like email when it comes to corporate policy. If the corporation archives all email
to and from employees, maybe they should do the same with instant messages,
which are starting to replace email, and phone calls, in a number of
organizations.
Note that an organization may well
want to think quite hard about archiving all instant messages, just like they
should have thought about archiving all email messages. Ask Bill Gates how much fun it was to
be asked during his depositions about email he had sent in a fit of peak years
before. If you do not archive the
email then you cannot be forced to produce it if you manage to get embroiled in
a lawsuit some time in the future.
I'm not a real fan of the archiving
of employee communications, it seems to be just another de-humanizing step
along the path towards corporate ownership of employees and a potential gold
mine for opposing attorneys. But I
do understand that some employees are not ideal corporate or real-world
citizens, and at least some monitoring is too often warranted but I'd
personally rather that one of the key word scanning tools be used than that all
email , and instant messages, be saved forever. These tools can scan for things like "guaranteed
profit" in email sent by brokers to their clients and archive (and block)
those letters.
Instant messaging is continuing
the flattening of organizational structures that email started. It's just too easy to send an instant
message to anyone bypassing "normal" hierarchies. Another story on CNN.com a few days ago
explored the use of instant messaging in the Navy where sailors are sending
messages between themselves, even when they are in different ships, and some
times navies. The navies of the
US, Canada, the UK, Australia and Germany now all use the same instant
messaging software. The article
seemed to think that cutting through the chain of command was a good thing, but
I'm a bit worried about the security implications of a supply clerk telling someone
he thinks is a supply clerk in another ship that they are stocking up on MREs.
The use of instant messaging in
business is yet another case where real change has happened without the
involvement of corporate planners because of the ease of innovation over the
Internet. People just started
using it and the planners are only starting to catch up. This is not the last time this will
happen. (In case it's not clear,
innovation is a good thing.)
disclaimer: Since "instant" and
"Harvard" are not related concepts the above is my own ramble.