C
Charles Dyer said:They can't be serious.
They can't be serious.
Oh, but they are - and a certain subset of MS customers (mostly
large corporations who buy thousands of licenses at a time) are
clamoring for it. This has been announced for months now...
However, since it requires Server2003 to implement, a lot of their
clients won't be able, or inclined, to use it. It will be great for
internal corporate documents, and for distribution of sensitive
documents to consultants and other outside workers.
That is if it's implemented elegantly and securely. Big Ifs.
The issue is not "rights protection" - I think all would agree that beingAlso, documents wont *automatically* be rights-protected. You'll still be
able to create a document that can be read cross-platform and
backwards-compatible. But you'll now also have the option to create a
rights-protected document that only can be opened by those people you want
to open it ... provided they have Office 2003 for Windows. (Hey, you didn't
expect Microsoft to add such a highly requested feature without making it
financially beneficial for themselves, did you?
the standard. PDFs and their security works just fine on Mac, PC and Linux.
We use it for all the necessary legal and restricted documents.
IMHO, "rights protection" is the Trojan
Horse, inside of which rides the real enemy - monopolistic control of the
product marketplace...
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