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Kim Gibbons, director of strategic marketing at Cisco Systems uses her own personal cell phone and iPad while working at Cisco in San Jose Friday Jan. 27, 2012. The laptop, however, is Cisco's. Bringing your own computer device to work - widely known as BYOD - is creating a huge problem for employers. Many workers insist on using their own smart phones, tablets and other tech gear at their jobs, because it's more convenient or because their equipment is superior to what their employers provide. But the trend poses the threat of company data getting onto the employees gear, which then can be stolen because it isn't properly shielded from cyber attacks.
Kim Gibbons, director of strategic marketing at Cisco Systems uses her own personal cell phone and iPad while working at Cisco in San Jose Friday Jan. 27, 2012. The laptop, however, is Cisco’s. Bringing your own computer device to work – widely known as BYOD – is creating a huge problem for employers. Many workers insist on using their own smart phones, tablets and other tech gear at their jobs, because it’s more convenient or because their equipment is superior to what their employers provide. But the trend poses the threat of company data getting onto the employees gear, which then can be stolen because it isn’t properly shielded from cyber attacks.
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Americans are spending more time on their digital devices, and that won’t change for years, according to a new study.

The University of Southern California report released this week shows that Americans consume “an enormous amount” of media via television, radio, phone and computer, amounting to an average of 63 gigabytes per person per day last year. All told, total U.S. media consumption reached 1.46 trillion hours in 2012, an average of 13.6 hours per person per day, a year-over-year increase of 5 percent.

In comparison, U.S. media consumption averaged 33 gigabytes per person per day in 2008. That year, Americans viewed and listened to media for 1.3 trillion hours, an average of 11 hours per person per day.

Those numbers are expected to increase in the coming years.

By 2015, data indicate that Americans will consume media for more than 1.7 trillion hours, an average of 15.5 hours per person per day. Mobile messaging hours, which last year accounted for about 9 percent of voice call hours, will double to more than 18 percent of voice hours, a year-over-year growth rate of more than 27 percent, the report said.

The study also found that viewing video in the Internet, which averaged fewer than three hours a month in 2008 and nearly six hours a month last year, will increase to nearly 11 hours a month by 2015.

The study, “How Much Media? 2013 Report on American Consumers,” was produced by the Institute for Communication Technology Management at USC’s Marshall School of Business.

Researchers broke media down into 30 categories and incorporated data from firms such as Niel-sen, Arbitron, ComScore, investor and analyst firms, government sources and foundation and research publications.

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