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PRESS RELEASE
Authentication Adoption gains Momentum at Email
Authentication Summit II
Sellout Crowd Learns Business Value of Authentication from
Real-World Case Studies by Fortune 500 Companies
CHICAGO - May 3, 2006 - The Email Authentication Summit II, held April 19 in
Chicago, was a great success as industry leaders provided insight into the
real-world deployment and the business value of authentication to a sold out
crowd of over 500. Built around the theme "Authentication & Reputation - Building Online Confidence," the event delivered powerful information on how
organizations of all sizes can combine authentication and reputation systems
to restore trust in email.
Attendance comprised a broad range of Fortune 500 companies across many
industry segments including financial institutions, eCommerce, travel,
healthcare and commercial. The response to the event has been very positive.
Trevor Hughes, executive director of the Email Sender and Provider Coalition
notes, "The Summit marked a pivotal point in the evolution of email
authentication and the need for businesses to take action. The turnout at
the show was very impressive and I think attendees went away with the
feeling that authentication has hit the mainstream. This is a great sign for
our industry."
During the past year, adoption of authentication has skyrocketed as
IronPort reported that over 3 million domains currently authenticate. In
addition, MarkMonitor provided updated research showing that in less than a
year, adoption by the Fortune 500 of Sender ID has increased three-fold to
over 21 percent.
"The Summit was a powerful statement about the business value of email
authentication and the need for the entire ecosystem to work," said Craig
Spiezle, director of the Technology Care and Safety Group at Microsoft Corp.
"Adoption of Sender ID and DKIM is accelerating, and the Summit underscored
how important it is for all businesses to take action to protect their
brands, their customers and their employees."
Fortune 500 Companies, U.S. Chamber of Commerce Demonstrate Business
Value of Authentication through Case Studies Case studies from organizations
such as Bank of America, Dell, eBay, Microsoft and the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce demonstrated how authentication moves beyond curbing spam and adds
business value to the organizations that adopt it.
MSN described how authentication plays a pivotal role in ensuring email
from legitimate senders makes it to the inbox. While helping to protect
approximately 230 million users of Windows Live Mail and MSN Hotmail
worldwide, MSN found that combining authentication with user-based
reputation systems reduced false positives to zero, and reduced false
negatives by more than 85 percent; thus enabling legitimate mailers to
protect their brand and domain.
eBay shared how they effectively rolled out SPF and DomainKeys for the
over 1.5 billion transactional email messages eBay and PayPal send each
month. Representatives from Bank of America and Dell Computer Company
discussed how they addressed the technical requirements of integrating
authentication into email systems. Microsoft and the U.S Chamber of Commerce
reported how Microsoft developed a domain defense strategy to thwart the
threats of fraud and identity theft.
"The Summit is a significant example of business and industry working
toward the goal of providing business prescriptive guidance to improve the
efficiency and effectiveness of the Internet," said Mike Zaneis, director,
Congressional and Public Affairs, U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "The Chamber
remains committed to working with the Summit and helping its three million
member business and customers achieve their goals."
Presentations and web casts from the Summit are available at no-charge
for download at
http://www.emailauthentication.org/summit2006.
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