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Australian police enforce content management

By Dave Glazier, ITWeb journalist
Johannesburg, 06 Sept 2006

Australian police enforce content management

Western Australia police have contracted vendor Objective to implement an enterprise content management system that will be used by more than 6 000 staff, reports ZDNet.

In a statement sent by Objective to the Australian Stock Exchange, it says the roll-out will initially seek to replace "file registration and tracking" functionality that is currently performed on a number of legacy mainframe systems.

Police superintendent Nigel White said the eventual decommissioning of mainframes had been identified as a corporate priority and would assist the organisation in upgrading to more user-friendly information systems.

IEEE society chooses SilkRoad

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Communications Society has adopted Eprise, SilkRoad`s Web content management solution.

Eprise has enabled IEEE Communications Society to seamlessly create Web sites for the organisation`s conferences.

The solution connects its members, who are spread across the globe, writes TMCNet.

Content management meets adult content

Privacy View Software has released Privacy View 2.10, a new version of the company`s privacy software.

"By combining content management techniques with privacy software, Privacy View is secure content management software for adult surfers," says the company in a statement accessed at PRWeb.

Privacy View hides and encrypts the adult surfer`s traces and any downloaded personal files such as images and movies, giving the user their own private adult desktop. It adds that Privacy View solves two problems for consumers of adult content: how to surf while keeping their Web traces private, and how to hide and manage their downloaded files.

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