Software execs send legislative wish list for the rest of the 110th Congress
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CTOs from the country's leading software companies urge Congress to fully fund $3.26 billion in initiatives that industry sees as critical in the president's fiscal 2009 budget.
A gathering of chief technology officers from the country's leading software companies is urging Congress to fully fund $3.26 billion in initiatives that industry sees as critical in the president's fiscal 2009 budget.
'In light of rising global economic competition and mixed signals in the domestic economy, we urge you to support several pending measures to strengthen America's high-tech industry,' CTOs of the Business Software Alliance wrote in a March 4 letter to Senate leaders in both parties.
In addition to funding programs including the Patent and Trademark Office and the Homeland Security Department's National Cyber Security Division, the CTOs also called for passage of patent reform legislation and information technology security bills.
They followed up the letter with visits to administration and congressional leaders in both houses during BSA's fifth CTO Forum in Washington this week. The gathering included CTOs from Adobe, Apple, Bentley, Computer Associates, EMC, McAfee, Microsoft, Sybase and Symantec.
'It is a chance to expose the technology world and Congress to each other,' said Kevin Richards, manager of federal government relations at Symantec. Legislators too often are not familiar with the issues that are critical to the $20 billion-a-year software industry, and industry leaders do not understand the legislative progress, he said.
One issue that the CTOs were briefed on during their visits was the president's broad cyber initiative, a proposed $30 billion program over seven years, for which $7.6 billion has been requested for 2009.
'We're enthusiastic about it,' although details were scarce, Richards said. 'They were still talking in generalities and didn't go much into specifics.'
Top 2009 funding priorities for the CTOs are:
- $2.1 billion to fund PTO to improve patent quality and reduce the time needed to examine applications. Faster, more thorough investigations would provide better protection to both patent holders and industry as a whole, Richards said.
- $430 million to fund the Commerce Department's International Trade Administration.
- $293.5 million for the National Cyber Security Division for further deployment of the EINSTEIN system on federal networks.
- $438 million to fund increased FBI IT security and program enhancements.
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