A number of Australian employees of Hewlett-Packard are facing the loss of their jobs as the global computer giant looks to slash its worldwide workforce by up to 30,000.
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Stan Beer
Saturday, 24 March 2007 11:26
As the increasing popularity of sites like YouTube, MySpace, Wikipedia
and Second Life demonstrate, the new breed of online user is not
content just to sit in front of the idiot box at a set time each week
to be served up pap when and where elite content providers decide.
The global nature of the Internet has also made redundant the outmoded
geographically-based content distribution system that the old media
still clings to.
An Internet user in the Czech Republic can access the same content on
YouTube at the same time as a user in the US. Why should TV shows be
any different?
The lawsuit lodged by Viacom against YouTube does indeed pose a threat
- but not to YouTube. Old media players like Viacom risk facing a
backlash from the already huge army of YouTube supporters, not to
mention Internet freedom activist groups such as Electronic Frontier
Foundation.
There already appears to be an undercurrent of resentment building as
is evidenced by a recent lawsuit lodged against Viacom in the US
District Court in San Francisco. According to an Associated Press
report, the lawsuit claims Viacom improperly asked YouTube to remove a
parody of a Viacom show called The Colbert Report.
Whether the lawsuit against Viacom has merit or not, it illustrates
that the newfound freedom of access to information and content provided
by players such as YouTube and Google is something that Internet users
are not going to give up easily. Those who try to stand in their way,
such as Viacom, may find that they have bitten off more than they can
chew.
Think again. Most businesses only have PART of a DR plan - and this spells business disaster in the event of an IT disaster.
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