Tuesday | 7 October, 2008
CIO
Trendlines: New, hot, unexpected
In this issue: The cap on H-1B visas; Corporate mash-ups; Face-reading computers; The lapsing landline; China and RFID; Banning of social networks; The value of big monitors; Efficiency in IT shops; and By the numbers, including IT modernization
Steff Gelston 14 April, 2008 14:16:00

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Bill Would Double Cap on H-1B Visas

A bill before the US Congress would double the number of immigrant worker visas available each year under the H-1B program.

The Innovation Employment Act, introduced last month by Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, would raise the H-1B visa cap from 65,000 a year to 130,000 a year. In addition, there would be no cap on H-1B applications for foreign graduate students attending US colleges and studying science, technology and related fields. Currently, there's a 20,000-a-year cap on visas for graduate students in all fields. The legislation would increase the H-1B cap to 180,000 in 2010 to 2015 if the 130,000 cap is reached the year before.

Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates called for an increase in the H-1B visa cap while testifying before the House of Representatives Science and Technology Committee in March. "We provide the world's best universities...and the students are not allowed to stay and work in the country," Gates said. The legislation "would boost America's competitiveness by giving US employers the flexibility they need to hire the best talent available to fill a severe shortage of qualified US high-skilled workers," the company said in a statement.

The bill would increase penalties for H-1B fraud and allows the US Department of Labor to reject applications for "clear indicators of fraud," in addition to the current rule of rejecting only applications that are inaccurate or incomplete. It also puts important safeguards on the H-1B program in place, says C.J. Karamargin, a spokesman for Giffords. It would prohibit companies from hiring H-1B workers, then outsourcing them to other companies, he says. Opponents have complained that outsourcing companies are among the top users of H-1B visas. The legislation would also prohibit companies with more than 50 employees that have more than half of their staff as H-1B workers from hiring more H-1Bs, and it would prohibit employers from advertising jobs as available only to H-1B workers, Karamargin says.

Critics say the bill does little to address worker concerns. "It doesn't require any kind of labor market test-demonstrating that a shortage actually exists before hiring an H-1B," says Ron Hira, a public policy professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology and former chairman of the Career and Workforce Policy Committee at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers-USA. The bill also doesn't fix "serious problems" in setting wage floors for H-1B workers and does "nothing to curb the practice of companies bringing in computer programmers for [US]$12 per hour to displace US workers," Hira says. "If this bill were to be passed as written, it would do serious damage to the American information technology labor market."

-Grant Gross

Now Businesses Can Get Mashed Up

Mash-ups are going corporate. IBM recently announced it has created code to secure mash-ups for businesses. Analysts say the technology will let companies merge data from websites or corporate systems to create rich Internet applications without exposing proprietary information

"This technology will allow people to create a mash-up without worrying that it will go phishing for personal data or financial information," says IBM Vice President of Emerging Technology Rod Smith. IBM calls the technology Smash, short for "secure mash-up." Big Blue contributed the code for Smash to the OpenAjax Alliance, a vendor group dedicated to the adoption of open and interoperable Ajax-based Web technologies.

According to IBM, the technology keeps mash-ups secure by separating the code and data from the two applications being combined. Once the code of the applications is separated, it merges the apps by opening a secure communications channel.

Smith says that business users, not just developers and technologists, will be able to utilize the tool to create their own applications. He adds that the apps can be pushed as widgets onto corporate workspaces on the intranet or over the Web. "They can grab snippets of information or parts of applications," he says. "They need the flexibility of assembling information based on their current business needs."

Developers still must do some work to make Smash more accessible to the novice user on the front end, notes Forrester analyst Jeffrey Hammond. "The technology provides the framework or the basis for users to do it on their own, but [developers] will need to build on top of it first," he says.

-C.G. Lynch

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