Updated: July 9, 2020 (November 10, 2003)

  Analyst Report

Rights Management Secures Office Content

My Atlas / Analyst Reports

3,301 wordsTime to read: 17 min
Rob Helm by
Rob Helm

As managing vice president, Rob Helm covers Microsoft collaboration and content management. His 25-plus years of experience analyzing Microsoft’s technology... more

Controlling confidential data could become easier with the help of a recently released Windows service called Windows Rights Management Services (RMS). Using RMS, the Professional Editions of several Office 2003 applications enable users to place restrictions (such as “do not print”) on documents and messages and ensure that those restrictions are enforced. RMS could help drive upgrades to Office 2003 in organizations that are subject to formal confidentiality regulations or are heavily dependent on trade secrets and other intellectual property. However, deploying RMS requires careful planning and considerable training for both administrators and users.

The Case for Rights Management

In general, rights management (sometimes called digital rights management, or DRM) allows the owner of digital data to define what other users may do with that data. So far, rights management software has primarily been used as a way for content producers, such as record companies or movie studios, to protect digital media content from unauthorized duplication and use.

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