Exemption for government BlackBerry users riles others facing shutdown
'They're sticking it to private business,' says one CIO
January 26, 2006 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
Government workers and emergency personnel would be exempt from a possible shutdown of BlackBerry wireless e-mail service in the U.S., a situation that has private-sector users steaming.
"They're sticking it to private business," said John Wade, CIO at St. Luke's Health System in Kansas City, Mo. St. Luke's supports nearly 500 health care workers using the BlackBerry service.
In the ongoing patent lawsuit brought by NTP Inc. against Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM), NTP adjusted its injunction request in a Jan. 17 memorandum to a federal judge, saying it will not seek to stop BlackBerry service for federal, state and local government users as well as certified first responders.
Explaining that change today, NTP attorney James Wallace Jr. said that NTP is complying with a federal law that says federal workers must be automatically exempted. As for the other government entities, he said: "We're not nasty, vindictive people and we're trying to help emergency responders. But purely commercial people are going to have to stop using BlackBerry unless RIM pays" licensing fees to NTP. "RIM chose not to take out a license, and the time of the free ride is over."
While several IT managers said in interviews that they doubt a court-ordered shutdown would ever take effect, they are miffed by the possibility of an exemption for public-sector users.
That's "not fair to the private sector," said Rick Proctor, vice president of IT at Thomas Nelson Inc., a Christian book publisher in Nashville. "I understand the government's desire for an exemption for mission-critical services, but I imagine that many private-sector companies could make the same argument."
The publishing company currently supports 45 BlackBerry users, and Proctor -- joined by several other IT managers -- wants an exemption for all existing customers of RIM's BlackBerry service, a number that has reached nearly 4 million in the U.S.
"Private-sector users have the same security and critical operations issues as government workers," said John Halamka, CIO of Harvard Medical School. The medical school supports 500 BlackBerry users, including doctors and medical staff. "Shutting down the RIM network for anyone seems like an extreme measure."
Frank Gillman, director of technology at Allen Matkins LLP, a law firm in Los Angeles, argued that it would be technologically difficult to exempt only government workers, since RIM e-mail runs across dozens of third-party wireless networks that would have to be advised of any shutdown. "How in God's green Earth would they pull that off? I would think the carriers would not be happy about that at
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