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The world according to Gates - by email

Michael Kanellos, CNET News.com CNET News.com

Published: 19 Jul 2002 11:03 BST

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Email has become a publishing medium for market researchers, spammers, exiled political dissidents and people selling ostrich jerky. And now, it will be used by Microsoft chairman Bill Gates.

Gates, Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer and other executives will periodically issue newsletters on the company's views about the role of technology and public policy, according to the software giant.

The first volume of the newsletter, about Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing initiative, went out Wednesday and was penned by Gates. The email gives an overview of the initiative and provides tips on how companies can make their computing environments more secure.

"Trustworthy Computing really is a journey rather than a destination," he wrote, "For customers, the most important first step is understanding what it will take to make their computers and networks more reliable and safe."

The first volume of the newsletter was sent to only a small fraction of subscribers to Microsoft's newsletters, a spokesman said. Overall, more than a million people subscribe to the dozen or so newsletters sent out by the company on a regular basis.

The public policy newsletter will not come out on a fixed schedule, but will emerge whenever Gates, Ballmer or another executive feels a burning issue is afoot.

Gates himself is no stranger to authorship. The executive has published several books on technology and business.

Security, of course, has been a primary objective for the company for the past 18 months. Six months ago, Gates declared security as Microsoft's highest priority. Different divisions in the company will be rated on how well they integrate security features into their products, several sources have said.

In an effort to avoid spamming, the first version of the newsletter was sent to existing newsletter subscribers. To receive subsequent editions, readers will have to register.


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When all is said, if Microsoft produce the best product people will buy it and thats a good thing. If people have to buy their product because no one else can produce an alternative, only because interoperability protocols are kept secret, then thats a bad thing.

By: pround

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