Groundbreaking Study Forecasts a Staggering 988 Billion Gigabytes of Digital Information Created in 2010



    EMC Corporation, the world leader in information infrastructure
    solutions, today announced groundbreaking EMC-sponsored research from
    IDC that for the first time measures and forecasts the amounts and
    types of digital information created and copied in the world - and
    whether it is generated from individuals or businesses.

    The Expanding Digital Universe: A Forecast of Worldwide
    Information Growth Through 2010 reveals the amount of information the
    world is creating and copying in a given year. It forecasts this
    entire "digital universe" through the year 2010, and it identifies the
    specific information types and geographies contributing to its growth.
    The report's findings have sweeping implications for individuals,
    businesses and society. The complete study can be found at:
    www.emc.com/about/destination/digital_universe.

    Key findings:

    -- The 2006 digital universe was 161 billion gigabytes (161
    exabytes) in size.

    -- IDC projects a six fold annual information growth from 2006 to
    2010.

    -- While nearly 70% of the digital universe will be generated by
    individuals by 2010, organizations will be responsible for the
    security, privacy, reliability and compliance of at least 85%
    of the information.

    In 2006, 161 exabytes of digital information were created and
    copied, continuing an unprecedented period of information growth. This
    digital universe equals approximately three million times the
    information in all the books ever written - or the equivalent of 12
    stacks of books, each extending more than 93 million miles from the
    earth to the sun. According to IDC, the amount of information created
    and copied in 2010 will surge more than six fold to 988 exabytes, a
    compound annual growth rate of 57%.

    While nearly 70% of the digital universe will be generated by
    individuals by 2010, most of this content will be touched by an
    organization along the way - on a network, in a data center, at a
    hosting site, at a telephone or Internet switch, or in a backup
    system. Organizations - including businesses of all sizes, agencies,
    governments and associations - will be responsible for the security,
    privacy, reliability and compliance of at least 85% of the
    information.

    "This ever-growing mass of information is putting a considerable
    strain on the IT infrastructures we have in place today," said Mark
    Lewis, EMC Executive Vice President and Chief Development Officer.
    "This explosive growth will change the way organizations and IT
    professionals do their jobs, and the way we consumers use information.
    Given that 85% of the information created and copied will be the
    responsibility of organizations and businesses, we must take steps as
    an industry to ensure we develop flexible, reliable and secure
    information infrastructures to handle the deluge."

    "The incredible growth and sheer amount of the different types of
    information being generated from so many different places represents
    more than just a worldwide information explosion of unprecedented
    scale," said John Gantz, Chief Research Officer and Senior Vice
    President, IDC. "It represents an entire shift in how information has
    moved from analog form, where it was finite, to digital form, where
    it's infinite. From a technology perspective, organizations will need
    to employ ever-more sophisticated techniques to transport, store,
    secure and replicate the additional information that is being
    generated every day."

    Other key findings:

    -- Images - Images, captured by more than 1 billion devices in
    the world, from digital cameras and camera phones to medical
    scanners and security cameras, comprise the largest component
    of the digital universe.

    -- Digital Cameras - The number of images captured on consumer
    digital still cameras in 2006 exceeded 150 billion worldwide,
    while the number of images captured on cell phones hit almost
    100 billion. IDC is forecasting the capture of more than 500
    billion images by 2010.

    -- Camcorders - Camcorder usage should double in total minutes of
    use between now and 2010.

    -- E-mail - The number of e-mail mailboxes has grown from 253
    million in 1998 to nearly 1.6 billion in 2006. During the same
    period, the number of e-mails sent grew three times faster
    than the number of people e-mailing; in 2006 just the e-mail
    traffic from one person to another - i.e., excluding spam -
    accounted for 6 exabytes.

    -- Instant Messaging - There will be 250 million IM accounts by
    2010, including consumer accounts from which business IMs are
    sent.

    -- Broadband - Today over 60% of Internet users have access to
    broadband circuits, either at home, at work or at school.

    -- Internet - In 1996 there were only 48 million people routinely
    using the Internet. The Worldwide Web was just two years old.
    By 2006, there were 1.1 billion users on the Internet. By
    2010, IDC expects another 500 million users to come online.

    -- Unstructured Data - Over 95% of the digital universe is
    unstructured data. In organizations, unstructured data
    accounts for more than 80% of all information.

    -- Compliance and Security - Today, 20% of the digital universe
    is subject to compliance rules and standards and about 30% is
    potentially subject to security applications.

    -- Classification - IDC estimates that today less than 10% of
    organizational information is "classified," or ranked
    according to value. IDC expects the amount of classified data
    to grow better than 50% a year.

    -- Emerging Economies - These now account for 10% of the digital
    universe but will grow 30-40% faster than mature economies.

    To find out more about information trends, history and
    preservation, go to: http://www.emc.com/about/destination/.

    About EMC

    EMC Corporation (NYSE: EMC) is the world's leading developer and
    provider of information infrastructure technology and solutions that
    enable organizations of all sizes to transform the way they compete
    and create value from their information. Information about EMC's
    products and services can be found at www.EMC.com.

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