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To: Pruguy who wrote (28802)11/5/1999 2:33:00 AM
From: EPS  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 42771
 
Net efficiency tools flooding market
By Paul Festa
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
November 3, 1999, 1:30 p.m. PT

update eCode, one of the first companies to market with a personal profiling tool,
is looking to build on its lead with a new product launch next week.

On Monday the company will launch a tool that it likens to a Swiss Army knife to help
users navigate the Web. The browser add-on, called the iBar, has tabs for a wide range of
Web applications and utilities, including an address book, a portable bookmarks file, and
automatic site login and forms-completion capabilities.

Although iBar's official debut is next week, the application is an extension of eCode's
year-old system for creating personal profiles that users can tote around with them from
site to site, filling in Web forms for purchases and registrations with just a few clicks of a
mouse.

The eCode system also lets users establish their own identifying Web page at
"username.ecode.com," where their contact and other information is stored and where they
can alter data so it automatically gets updated in other
users' records.

Even with a fresh product, however, eCode has its work cut
out for it. Although first-to-market still carries some cachet,
start-ups like eCode may find it hard to maintain an early
market lead, particularly when a hot niche draws giant
competitors, such as Novell and Microsoft.

For example, Novell launched a product called Digitalme
last month. Based on Novell's Directory Services
technology, Digitalme lets users create a profile with
passwords, usernames, account numbers, bookmarks, and
site preferences, in addition to a "MeCard" that lets them
tailor the information in their digital identities and exchange
information with others.

eCode chief executive Rohit Chandra acknowledged that competitors are proliferating just
as his business is getting off the ground, but he predicted that his early start will give the
company an edge.

"We were first in this space and we have the biggest traction," Chandra said. "It's a similar
idea that Digitalme is picking up on, and it's good that they're picking up on it. It's a space
we're carving out, and it's been gaining momentum."

Other offerings that provide so-called e-wallets for automatically filling in forms on
commerce sites include Microsoft Passport, EntryPoint (the combination of PointCast's
news and information delivery service and eWallet's shopping functions), Lucent
Technologies' ProxyMate, and Qpass.

eCode's early start has gained it 100,000 users in 130 countries, Chandra said. The
privately funded firm is approaching investment banks about an initial public offering.

Offerings like eCode and its many competitors have raised the hackles of some privacy
advocates concerned about the aggregation and use of users' personal information.
Chandra said that eCode gives users control over how their information is used.

"The issue of privacy is one that we take very, very seriously," he said. "The user retains
privacy control, and their information is kept private."

Chandra said eCode in the next few weeks will add a new level of security that will require
Web surfers to get permission before accessing eCode users' contact information home
pages.

To make money, eCode will follow the lead of Web portals in charging commerce and
content firms for leads generated from the iBar. The download, about 40K, is free to users.

eCode is slated to release another related product, aimed at the business-to-business
market, in the next three weeks, Chandra said. He would not describe it further.

Chandra, a native of New Dehli, worked as an engineer for Informix and Hewlett-Packard
before starting his own information technology consulting business and then, in 1997,
founding eCode.