<p>Enterprises have enjoyed a mutually beneficial relationship between developer partners and Microsoft's SharePoint for some time--allowing the nearly ubiquitous software to jive with legacy systems and business-specific tools. But compliance and video updates unveiled at last week's SharePoint Conference in Las Vegas, could unnerve some of the partners on which Microsoft relies.</p><p>During the event Microsoft teased its forthcoming Unified Compliance Center, which builds upon compliance tools found in Exchange and allows them to be leveraged seamlessly across all tools in Office 365. The tool will allow for multifactor authentication to facilitate not just eDiscovery but true auditing and compliance enforcement.</p><p>Compliance and risk management vendor HiSoftware currently supports SharePoint on premise but they're looking to rollout an Office 365 version around mid-year, said Director and Chief Product Officer Mike McAuley, during a conversation at the conference. McAuley added that he isn't too concerned about the Unified Compliance Center.</p><p>"We still have the depth and domain knowledge in this area," he said. "We understand that Microsoft needed to tick the box. We'll keep working with them."</p><p><a href="http://www.fiercecontentmanagement.com/story/compliance-video-portals-could-shake-sharepoint-partners/2014-03-12">Keep reading...</a></p><p>Read also:</p><p><a href="http://www.techrepublic.com/article/microsoft-tries-to-puff-up-the-cloud-with-improvements-to-onedrive-for-business/">Microsoft tries to puff up the cloud with improvements to OneDrive for Business</a> (TechRepublic)</p><p>Explore: <a href="http://news.google.com/news/more?ncl=d7plM95h9UY9rHMMYDaYpux4tCSAM&authuser=0&ned=us">2 additional articles.</a></p>