A system to track digital rights management, computer memory that can survive
high temperatures and a 3D facial recognition technology have won the three
grand prizes at the 2006
European IST Prize Awards.
Each nominee won €5,000, and the three grand prize winners each took home an
additional €200,000.
A jury of 18 judges chosen by non-profit organisation
Euro-CASE recommended
the winners to the
European
Commission, which awarded the prize money.
Given the recent copyright ruling in France affecting
Apple's
iPod, and Steve Jobs's belligerent
response, the timeliest winner was French firm
Advestigo.
The company's
AdvestiSEARCH
digital rights management software tracks copyrighted material that is posted
online.
"We have been in business with the music industry in France for the past 12
months and, with the political debate, things have been a little on hold,"
Michel Roux, president and chief executive at Advestigo, told
vnunet.com.
"Things will now start up again based on the legal foundation that has been
defined in France.
"The go-to-market is key. We have the technology, we have the service in
place and now it's a question of talking to people. Hopefully we will provide
other applications for the European and US markets."
With nominees 3DSolar,
Creist and
ZOOtech missing out on a
grand prize, the only British link to the winners was Dutch company
Cavendish
Kinetics.
The firm's
Nanomech
memory system is designed to withstand radiation and temperatures up to 200°C,
and was developed at Cambridge
University. The company was spun-off from the university in 1994.
The third grand prize winner was Danish company
Guardia for its
Guardia
Control System which uses 3D models to improve facial recognition for
security products.
The European IST Prize Awards is open to entrants from 33 European countries
and there is a business focus to the winning entries.
"The difference between this prize and many prizes given by academies is that
this is really for the future," said George Grunberg of Euro-CASE's French
Academy.
"That's why innovation is important, but the credibility of succeeding in the
market is also a key issue. That's why we have three coherent criteria: the
technological innovation, the market potential and the social impact."
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