http://www.microsoft-watch.com/article2/0,4248,899456,00.asp

'Information Rights Management' To Debut in Office 2003 
By Mary Jo Foley  
 
Microsoft to thread DRM throughout Outlook, Word, Excel and PowerPoint in
its next-generation desktop suite. 
 
It looks like the "rights management technology" that Microsoft has been
rumored to be building into Office is on the cusp of debuting in Office
2003.
The Windows enthusiasts over at Neowin.Net have the dish on the
"Information Rights Management" component of the Office 2003 Beta 2 code
that appeared � then disappeared � from the MSDN site this week.

"IRM is a persistent file-level technology from Microsoft that allows the
user to specify permission for who can access and use documents or e-mail
messages, and helps prevent sensitive information from being printed,
forwarded, or copied by unauthorized individuals," according the early
Beta 2 text. "Once permission for a document or message has been
restricted with this technology, the access and usage restrictions are
enforced no matter where the information is."

Microsoft is threading DRM throughout the Office 2003 suite, allowing
restrictions to be set on Outlook mail messages, as well as on Word,
Excel and PowerPoint documents. Using "permission templates," document
authors can determine restriction policies to be applied to entire
categories of documents, according to Microsoft's site.

Redmond has been working to include DRM in a slew of its products.
Currently, Windows Media Series includes DRM code. But Microsoft has been
seeking ways to incorporate DRM in Office, Windows, SharePoint Team
Services and Internet Explorer. Microsoft also is working on a DRM
server, code-named "Tungsten," which is slated to ship initially as a
Windows Server 2003 add-on later this year. The Office IRM documentation
says that Microsoft plans to release its rights-management update for IE
"later this spring."

Microsoft is requiring users who want the IRM functionality to be running
Windows Server 2003, Microsoft Passport and a special Client Access
License (CAL). Microsoft is offering Office Beta 2 customers who do not
have Windows Server 2003 a free, hosted version of IRM to test.

Separately, Microsoft is beta testing another product it is calling a
"Windows Rights Management client. The company posted Beta 2 of the
client to its Web site on February 11, as first reported by Steven Bink
on his Web site.

A Microsoft spokeswoman declined to talk details about the Windows Rights
Client, but did say that Microsoft's DRM strategy encompassed "an
application layer, a server layer and client components, as well."
 


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