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 May 12, 2008, 2:15 pm
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TCS, Stanford in R&D pact for data privacy


Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) announced on Monday that it had entered into $1 million dollar, five-year R&D collaboration with Stanford University in the US for research in the critical area of data privacy.

TCS scientists from the Tata Research Development and Design Centre in Pune and the computer science department at Stanford University will work on joint projects in the areas of security and data privacy through this collaboration.

"Data privacy is at the centrestage of global organisations. The available data privacy tools and technologies being developed worldwide are at a very early stage of development. We have been approached by many banks and financial institutions looking to secure communication and mask critical data. This collaboration brings the best minds from the academia and industry together. Universities need large amounts of data for testing new ideas and that is something which TCS intends providing through such collaborations," said Mr S. Ramadorai, chief executive officer and managing director, TCS. Stanford is one of the leading US universities working in the area of data privacy.



More jobs in tourism than IT


The government is addressing various factors hampering the growth of India’s tourism sector which has more potential for creating jobs than the booming IT industry, says tourism minister Ambika Soni.Ms Soni, the high-profile Congress leader who was recently inducted into Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s Cabinet, said she would continue her ministry’s efforts to get industry status for tourism, as this would lead to rationalisation of the taxation regime.

"Tourism has become an area which has the biggest potential for employment generation. In fact, it has more potential than the IT industry," Ambika Soni said here on Monday during an informal interaction with reporters.She listed shortage of hotel rooms and liberalisation of visa regime as some of the priorities her ministry would focus on.

"We have asked the Delhi Development Authority and state governments to identify sites that can be auctioned or leased out (to private players to build hotels). We will need 100,000 rooms by 2010," Ambika Soni said.

She pointed out that the price for plots in Delhi being offered for building hotels had gone up to as much as Rs 400-million an acre. "How can you afford this land? And what sort of rates would they charge for rooms at such hotels?" The minister said the railways had already committed to provide 100 sites across the country to build hotels or guesthouses.



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