SOFTNET SYSTEMS INC
PRE 14A, 1998-12-24
TELEPHONE INTERCONNECT SYSTEMS
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                                  SCHEDULE 14A
                                 (RULE 14a-101)
                    INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
          PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE SECURITIES
                     EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (AMENDMENT NO.  )
 
     Filed by the registrant [X]
 
     Filed by a party other than the registrant [ ]
 
     Check the appropriate box:
 
     [X] Preliminary proxy statement        [ ] Confidential, for Use of the
                                                Commission Only (as permitted by
                                                Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
 
     [ ] Definitive proxy statement
 
     [ ] Definitive additional materials
 
     [ ] Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12

                              SOFTNET SYSTEMS, INC.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

       
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
 
Payment of filing fee (Check the appropriate box):
 
     [X] No fee required.
 
     [ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4)and 0-11.
 
     (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     (3) Per unit  price  or other  underlying  value  of  transaction  computed
         pursuant to  Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the
         filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     (5) Total fee paid:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     [ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     [ ] Check box if any part of the fee is  offset as   provided  by  Exchange
         Act Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting
         fee was paid  previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration
         statement number, or the form or schedule and the date of its filing.
 
     (1) Amount previously paid:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     (2) Form, schedule or registration statement no.:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     (3) Filing party:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     (4) Date filed:
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>

                              SOFTNET SYSTEMS, INC.
                                520 Logue Avenue
                         Mountain View, California 94043



                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                         TO BE HELD ON FEBRUARY __, 1999

TO THE STOCKHOLDERS OF SOFTNET SYSTEMS, INC.:

                  NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of Stockholders
of SoftNet Systems,  Inc., a New York corporation (the "Company"),  will be held
on February __,  1999,  at 10:00 a.m.  local time,  at the  Company's  corporate
offices located at 650 Townsend Street, San Francisco, California 94103, for the
following purposes, as more fully described in the Proxy Statement  accompanying
this Notice:

1.  To approve the Company's reincorporation in Delaware;

2.   To increase the number of authorized shares of capital stock;

3.   To approve the listing of the  Company's  common  stock on the Nasdaq Stock
     Market;

4.   To approve the adoption of the Company's  1998 Stock  Incentive  Plan under
     which 2,850,668 shares of common stock have been reserved for issuance;

5.   To authorize  and approve the issuance of the common stock  underlying  the
     Company's  Convertible  Preferred  Stock and  Warrants to  purchase  common
     stock,  which  in  the  aggregate  would  represent  20%  or  more  of  the
     outstanding shares of common stock;

6.   To approve the sale of the Company's non-Internet related subsidiaries;

7.   To elect directors;

8.   To  appoint  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as  independent  auditors  of the
     Company for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1999; and

9.   To conduct such other business as may properly come before the meeting.

                  Only  stockholders  of  record  at the  close of  business  on
January __, 1999 are  entitled to notice of and to vote at this Annual  Meeting.
The stock transfer books will not be closed between the record date and the date
of the meeting.  A list of stockholders  entitled to vote at this Annual Meeting
will be available for inspection at the executive offices of the Company.

                  All stockholders  are cordially  invited to attend the meeting
in  person.  Whether  or not you plan to  attend,  please  sign and  return  the
enclosed  proxy as  promptly  as  possible  in the  envelope  enclosed  for your
convenience.  Should you  receive  more than one proxy  because  your shares are
registered  in different  names and  addresses,  each proxy should be signed and
returned to assure that all your shares will be voted. You may revoke your proxy
at any time prior to this Annual Meeting.  If you attend this Annual Meeting and
vote by ballot,  your proxy will be revoked  automatically and only your vote at
the meeting will be counted.

                  WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE  MEETING,  PLEASE  SIGN,
DATE AND MAIL THE ENCLOSED  PROXY IN THE  ENVELOPE  PROVIDED  WHICH  REQUIRES NO
POSTAGE FOR MAILING IN THE UNITED STATES. A PROMPT RESPONSE IS HELPFUL, AND YOUR
COOPERATION WILL BE APPRECIATED.

                       BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS


                                                     Steven M. Harris
                          Vice President and Secretary
______________, 1998



<PAGE>



                              SOFTNET SYSTEMS, INC.
                               650 Townsend Street
                         San Francisco, California 94103

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                   FOR THE 1999 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                         TO BE HELD ON FEBRUARY __, 1999

General

                  The  enclosed  proxy  ("Proxy")  is solicited on behalf of the
Board of Directors (the "Board of Directors" or the "Board") of SoftNet Systems,
Inc., a New York corporation (the "Company"), for use at the 1999 Annual Meeting
of Stockholders (the "Annual Meeting"). The Annual Meeting will be held at 10:00
a.m. on February  __, 1999 at the  Company's  corporate  offices  located at 650
Townsend  Street,  San Francisco,  California  94103.  These proxy  solicitation
materials  were  mailed  on or about  ______________,  1998 to all  stockholders
entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting.

Voting

                  The specific  proposals to be considered and acted upon at the
Annual  Meeting are summarized in the  accompanying  Notice and are described in
more detail in this Proxy Statement. On ____________,  1999, the record date for
determination  of  stockholders  entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual
Meeting (the "Record Date"),  ___________  shares of the Company's common stock,
$.01 par value ("common stock"),  were issued and outstanding.  Each stockholder
is entitled to one vote for each share of common stock held by such  stockholder
on _____________, 1999.

                  A majority of the  outstanding  shares entitled to vote at the
Annual Meeting and  represented in person or by proxy will  constitute a quorum.
Each  share has one vote on all other  matters  to be voted  upon at the  Annual
Meeting. If choices are not specified on the proxy, the shares will be voted for
the  proposal  described  herein.  Under New York law,  abstentions  and  broker
"non-votes" will be counted towards  determining the presence of a quorum.  With
respect  to all  proposals,  abstentions  and broker  "non-votes"  will have the
effect of a negative  vote. A broker  "non-vote"  occurs when a nominee  holding
shares for a beneficial  owner does not vote for a particular  proposal  because
the nominee does not have  discretionary  voting power with respect to that item
and has not received  instructions from the beneficial owner. Unvoted shares are
termed  "non-votes" when a nominee holding shares for beneficial  owners may not
have received  instructions from the beneficial owner and may not have exercised
discretionary voting power on certain matters, but with respect to other matters
may have voted  pursuant to  discretionary  authority or  instructions  from the
beneficial owners.

                  The  following  outlines  the vote  required  to approve  each
proposal set forth in this Proxy:

o Proposal  One,  reincorporation  in  Delaware,  requires  approval by at least
two-thirds of the Company's outstanding common stock.

o    Proposal Two,  increase of the  authorized  stock of the Company,  requires
     approval by at least a majority of all outstanding  shares entitled to vote
     at the Annual Meeting.

o    Proposal Three,  listing of the Company's  common stock on the Nasdaq Stock
     Market ("NASDAQ"),  does not require approval by the Company's stockholders
     but the Company has decided to include it for your consideration.  At least
     a majority of the shares of common  stock  present in person or by proxy at
     the Annual Meeting is required for approval.

o    Proposal  Four,  adoption  of the  Company's  1998  Stock  Incentive  Plan,
     requires  approval  by at least a majority  of the  shares of common  stock
     present in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting.

o    Proposal Five,  authorization and approval of the issuance of the Company's
     common stock  underlying  its  Convertible  Preferred  Stock and  Warrants,
     requires  approval  by at least a majority  of the  shares of common  stock
     present in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting.

o    Proposal  Six, to approve the sale of the  Company's  non-Internet  related
     businesses,  requires  approval  by at least  two-thirds  of the  Company's
     outstanding common stock.

o    Proposal  Seven,  to  elect  directors,  requires  approval  by at  least a
     majority of the shares of common stock present in person or by proxy at the
     Annual Meeting.

o    Proposal  Eight,  to  appoint  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as  independent
     auditors of the Company for the fiscal  year  ending  September  30,  1999,
     shares of common stock present in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting.

                  As of the Record Date,  the current  Directors and officers of
the  Company  have the  right to  vote___  shares,  representing  _____%  of the
outstanding common stock, and have advised the Company that their present intent
is to vote in favor of each proposal and all persons nominated as directors.

                  The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR each proposal.

Revocability of Proxies

                  You may  revoke or change  your  Proxy at any time  before the
Annual  Meeting by filing with the  Secretary  of the  Company at the  Company's
principal executive offices, a notice of revocation or another signed proxy with
a later date. You may also revoke your proxy by attending the Annual Meeting and
voting in person.

Solicitation

                  The  Company  will  bear  the  entire  cost  of  solicitation,
including  the  preparation,  assembly,  printing  and  mailing  of  this  Proxy
Statement,  the proxy  and any  additional  soliciting  materials  furnished  to
stockholders.  Copies of  solicitation  materials will be furnished to brokerage
houses,  fiduciaries,  and  custodians  holding  shares in their  names that are
beneficially owned by others so that they may forward this solicitation material
to such beneficial  owners. In addition,  the Company may reimburse such persons
for their costs in  forwarding  the  solicitation  materials to such  beneficial
owners.  The original  solicitation  of proxies by mail may be supplemented by a
solicitation by telephone,  telegram,  or other means by directors,  officers or
employees.  Except as described  above, the Company does not presently intend to
solicit proxies other than by mail.

                                  RISK FACTORS

                  The Company faces certain risks in operating its business, and
the  Company's  securityholders  face  certain  risks in holding  the  Company's
securities.  Please see the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended September 30, 1998, which is being delivered with this Proxy Statement and
is incorporated by reference herein.

                   MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED AT ANNUAL MEETING

                                  PROPOSAL ONE

                           REINCORPORATION IN DELAWARE

General

                  On  October 6, 1998,  the Board of  Directors  adopted a plan,
subject to approval by the stockholders,  to reincorporate the Company under the
laws  of  the  State  of  Delaware  (the  "Reincorporation").  The  Company  was
incorporated  under  the laws of the  State of New York in 1956  under  the name
Tensor Electric  Development Co. Inc. The Board of Directors  believes  Delaware
corporate  law will better  serve the  stockholders'  interests  and provide the
Company with advantages not available  under New York corporate law.  Therefore,
the Board of Directors  recommends the  stockholders  approve the form of Merger
Agreement  that  appears as Appendix A at the end of this Proxy  Statement  (the
"Merger Agreement") to effect a transaction commonly called a "reincorporation."

                  The Company will continue to be called "SoftNet Systems, Inc."
after  the  reincorporation.  To  explain  the  proposal,  however,  this  Proxy
Statement  will call the  Company  that exists  today as a New York  corporation
either "the Company" or "SoftNet-NY,"  while  "SoftNet-DE" will refer to the new
Delaware  corporation  that  will  initially  be  organized  as  a  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of  SoftNet-NY.  If  the  holders  of at  least  two-thirds  of  all
outstanding shares of the common stock approve the Merger Agreement,  SoftNet-NY
will be merged into  SoftNet-DE.  The effective  date will be when the necessary
documents have been filed in both New York and Delaware.  SoftNet-DE will be the
surviving corporation, and the charter and Bylaws of the new corporation will be
substantially  the  same as those  of  SoftNet-NY  today,  except  as  otherwise
discussed below.

Reasons for the Change

                  The Company has not  maintained  its  principal  office in New
York for some time. It is anticipated  that  SoftNet-DE  will have its principal
corporate  offices at  SoftNet-NY's  address in  California,  and will appoint a
registered  agent to represent it in Delaware.  SoftNet-NY's  current address is
650 Townsend Street, San Francisco, California 94103. The Company will move into
the new space  when it is  available,  which is  anticipated  to be in the first
calendar  quarter  of 1999.  Reincorporation  in  Delaware  will not  change the
business plan, management,  assets,  liabilities,  net worth,  capitalization or
employee benefit plans of the Company.  Each  outstanding  share of SoftNet-NY's
common stock and preferred stock (hereinafter  referred to as the "common stock"
and "Preferred Stock,"  respectively) will automatically become one share of the
common stock or preferred stock, respectively, of SoftNet-DE.  Furthermore, each
stock option,  warrant or convertible  security that would be, or later becomes,
exercisable  for,  or  convertible   into,  shares  of  the  common  stock  will
automatically  be, or later become,  exercisable  for, or convertible  into, the
same number of shares of the common  stock of  SoftNet-DE  on the same terms and
conditions.

                  For many years, Delaware has encouraged  incorporation in that
state by adopting  modern,  comprehensive  and flexible  corporate  laws, and it
periodically  updates and revises  them to meet  changing  business  needs.  The
Delaware  General  Corporation  Law (the "DGCL") is  considered a  sophisticated
statute,  highly  conducive to business.  That is why many  corporations  choose
Delaware  initially  as their place of  incorporation,  and why many others have
reincorporated  in Delaware by means of transactions  like the one now proposed.
Because of Delaware's policy of encouraging incorporation and its preeminence as
the most popular state of incorporation  for major  corporations,  the courts of
Delaware have developed considerable expertise in dealing with corporate issues.
As a  result,  Delaware's  case  law  interpreting  its  corporate  laws is more
developed  than that of any other state.  This gives  Delaware  corporate law an
extra  measure  of  predictability  that is  useful  and  often  crucial  in our
precedent-based judicial system.

                  For the board of directors  and the  management  of a Delaware
corporation,  these features of Delaware law allow greater certainty in managing
the  corporation.  The state's court system also provides for relatively  prompt
resolution of most corporate disputes.  For example,  Delaware has a specialized
Court of  Chancery  that  hears  cases  involving  corporate  law.  The Court of
Chancery has no jurisdiction  over most other kinds of cases,  and therefore its
dockets are not as  backlogged as many other  states.  In addition,  the Supreme
Court of Delaware hears and decides important corporate appeals rapidly.

                  The  Board of  Directors  considered  the  predictability  and
flexibility of Delaware law and the  efficiency of its judicial  process when it
approved  the present  proposal.  The Board of  Directors  also  recognized  the
possibility that choosing to be governed by the corporate law of Delaware, as so
many other  corporations  have done,  may further  enhance the reputation of the
Company.

Authorized Shares of Capital Stock

                  After  the  Reincorporation,   and  depending  on  stockholder
approval of Proposal Two herein, the authorized capital stock of SoftNet-DE will
consist  of  100,000,000  shares of common  stock,  par value $.01 per share and
4,000,000  shares of preferred  stock, par value $.10 per share (see the section
"Changes in Authorized  Capital  Stock" under this  Proposal One for  additional
discussion).  SoftNet-DE  will not issue any shares of stock in connection  with
the Reincorporation,  other than the shares into which the outstanding shares of
SoftNet-NY will convert.  In the event the  stockholders do not approve Proposal
Two, the authorized shares of common stock of SoftNet-DE will be 25,000,000.

Conversion of Shares

                  As soon as the Reincorporation  becomes effective,  SoftNet-DE
will issue a press release announcing that the transaction has occurred.  At the
same time,  the holders of the old shares of SoftNet-NY  will become  holders of
the new shares of SoftNet-DE.  Shares of SoftNet-NY will  automatically  convert
into shares of SoftNet-DE, on these terms:

o    The conversion will be on a one-for-one basis.

o    Each share of the common stock of SoftNet-NY  which is  outstanding  at the
     effective  date will  become one share of the new common  stock,  par value
     $.01 per share, of SoftNet-DE.

o    Each share of the Preferred Stock of SoftNet-NY which is outstanding at the
     effective date will become one share of the new preferred  stock, par value
     $.10 per share, of SoftNet-DE.

o    Each share of the common stock and Preferred  Stock held in the treasury of
     SoftNet-NY will become a share held in the treasury of SoftNet-DE.

                  THIS  MEANS  THAT,  BEGINNING  ON  THE  EFFECTIVE  DATE,  EACH
SOFTNET-NY   STOCK   CERTIFICATE   WHICH  WAS   OUTSTANDING   JUST   BEFORE  THE
REINCORPORATION  WILL  AUTOMATICALLY  REPRESENT  THE SAME  NUMBER OF  SOFTNET-DE
SHARES.  THEREFORE,  STOCKHOLDERS  OF SOFTNET-NY  NEED NOT EXCHANGE  THEIR STOCK
CERTIFICATES  FOR NEW  SOFTNET-DE  STOCK  CERTIFICATES.  LIKEWISE,  STOCKHOLDERS
SHOULD  NOT  DESTROY  THEIR  OLD  CERTIFICATES  AND  SHOULD  NOT SEND  THEIR OLD
CERTIFICATES  TO THE  CORPORATION,  EITHER BEFORE OR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF
REINCORPORATION.

Trading of the Stock

                  After   the   Reincorporation,   those   who   were   formerly
stockholders  of SoftNet-NY may continue to make sales or transfers  using their
SoftNet-NY   stock   certificates.   SoftNet-DE  will  issue  new   certificates
representing shares of SoftNet-DE common stock for transfers occurring after the
effective date of the  Reincorporation.  On request,  SoftNet-DE  will issue new
certificates to anyone who holds SoftNet-NY stock certificates.  Any request for
new certificates will be subject to normal stock transfer requirements including
proper endorsement,  signature guarantee, if required, and payment of applicable
taxes.

                  Stockholders  whose shares of SoftNet-NY  were freely tradable
before  the  Reincorporation  will own  shares  of  SoftNet-DE  that are  freely
tradable  after  the  Reincorporation.   Similarly,   any  Stockholders  holding
securities  with  transfer  restrictions  before the  Reincorporation  will hold
shares  of  SoftNet-DE  which  have the same  transfer  restrictions  after  the
Reincorporation.  For purposes of computing the holding period under Rule 144 of
the  Securities  Act of  1933,  as  amended,  those  who hold  SoftNet-DE  stock
certificates  will be  deemed  to have  acquired  their  shares on the date they
originally acquired their shares in SoftNet-NY.

                  After the  Reincorporation,  SoftNet-DE  will continue to be a
publicly  held  company,  with its common stock  tradable on the American  Stock
Exchange ("AMEX"), or, subject to shareholder approval of Proposal Three herein,
tradable over the Nasdaq Stock Market ("NASDAQ"). SoftNet-DE will also file with
the Securities and Exchange  Commission  (the  "Commission")  and provide to its
stockholders  the same types of information that SoftNet-NY has previously filed
and provided.

Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences

                  The  following  is a brief  summary of the  principal  federal
income tax consequences of the  Reincorporation  under current law to holders of
the common stock and Preferred  Stock.  This summary is for general  information
only. It does not address  potential  legislative  changes that may affect these
consequences,  and  it  does  not  address  any  state,  local  or  foreign  tax
consequences  of  reincorporation.  The Company has not  obtained,  and does not
intend to obtain,  a ruling from the Internal Revenue Service to the effect that
the Reincorporation is nontaxable.

                  Neither the Company nor its  stockholders  will  recognize any
gain or loss by reason of the  Reincorporation.  The tax basis of the  shares of
SoftNet-DE  common  stock and  preferred  stock  received  by a  stockholder  of
SoftNet-NY  through  the  Reincorporation  will be the same as the tax  basis of
SoftNet-NY  common  stock  and  Preferred  Stock  prior  to  Reincorporation.  A
stockholder  of SoftNet-NY who holds the stock as a capital asset should include
the  period  he or she  has  held  the  common  stock  and  Preferred  Stock  in
determining the holding period for his or her SoftNet-DE shares.

                  STOCKHOLDERS  SHOULD  CONSULT  THEIR  PERSONAL TAX ADVISERS TO
DISCUSS THEIR OWN TAX SITUATIONS AND ANY POTENTIAL CHANGES IN FEDERAL, STATE AND
LOCAL LAWS AND OTHER APPLICABLE TAX MATTERS RELATING TO THE REINCORPORATION.

Abandonment

                  The Board of  Directors  will have the  right to  abandon  the
Merger Agreement and take no further action towards  reincorporating the Company
in Delaware at any time before the Reincorporation becomes effective, even after
stockholder  approval,  if for any reason the Board of Directors determines that
it is not advisable to proceed with the Reincorporation,  including  considering
the number of shares for which appraisal rights have been exercised and the cost
to the Company thereof.

Comparison of New York and Delaware Corporate Laws

                  If this  Proposal  One is  approved by the holders of at least
two-thirds  of the  Company's  outstanding  common  stock,  and  if the  Company
reincorporates  in Delaware as described  above,  then the  stockholders  of the
Company will become  stockholders of the new Delaware  corporation,  SoftNet-DE.
There are  differences  between the  Business  Corporation  Law of New York (the
"NYBCL")  and the DGCL that will  affect the rights of  stockholders  in certain
respects.   Some  of  these  differences  define  the  particular  provisions  a
corporation  may choose to put into its certificate of  incorporation,  commonly
called the  "charter,"  and other  differences  may not affect the  Company in a
material way.

                  The  following is a summary of the rights of  shareholders  of
SoftNet-NY  under the NYBCL and SoftNet-DE under the DGCL. This summary does not
purport to be a complete  discussion  of, and is  qualified  in its  entirety by
reference  to the  NYBCL , the  DGCL  and the  Certificate  and  Bylaws  of both
SoftNet-NY and SoftNet-DE. This summary reflects certain amendments to the NYBCL
that became effective on June 15, 1998.

         Amendment of Charter

                  Both the  NYBCL  and the DGCL  allow a board of  directors  to
recommend a charter  amendment for approval by  stockholders,  and a majority of
the shares  entitled to vote at a  stockholders'  meeting are normally enough to
approve  that  amendment.  Both  bodies of law  require  that a majority  of the
holders of any particular  class of stock must approve the amendment if it would
have an adverse effect on the holders of that class. In addition, both bodies of
law allow a  corporation  to require a vote  larger  than a majority  on special
types of issues.

         Amendment of Bylaws

                  The Bylaws of SoftNet-NY  provide,  as permitted by the NYBCL,
that the Board of Directors  may amend,  adopt or repeal the  Company's  Bylaws,
subject to the rights of  stockholders  to alter,  amend, or repeal those Bylaws
made by the Board of Directors  except that the Board of Directors shall have no
power to alter,  amend or repeal a Bylaw adopted by the stockholders.  Under the
DGCL, however,  the board of directors may amend, adopt or repeal Bylaws only if
permitted  by the  charter.  Additionally,  both the  NYBCL  and the DGCL  allow
stockholders  to further amend or repeal Bylaws  adopted or amended by the board
of directors.  The charter of SoftNet-DE will  specifically  permit amendment of
the Bylaws by the Board of Directors.

         Special Meetings of Stockholders

                  Under both the NYBCL and the DGCL,  the board of  directors or
anyone  authorized  in the  charter  or  Bylaws  may call a special  meeting  of
stockholders. Currently the Bylaws of SoftNet-NY allow the Chairman of the Board
of Directors, the President or the Board of Directors to call a special meeting.
The  Bylaws  further  provide  that  upon  written  request  to the  Company  by
stockholders who hold not less than 66-2/3% of the outstanding shares of capital
stock of the Company entitled to vote for the election of directors, the Company
shall call a special meeting.  The provision in the Bylaws of SoftNet-DE will be
comparable,  except that only 15% of the outstanding  shares of the common stock
of the Company  entitled to vote for the election of directors  will be required
to call a special meeting.

         Corporate Action without Stockholders' Meeting

                  The  NYBCL  and DGCL  differ  concerning  corporate  action by
written  consent  and  without a  stockholders  meeting.  Under the  NYBCL,  the
corporation's  charter may permit the holders of at least the minimum  number of
votes  required to authorize such an action to take the action.  Otherwise,  the
consent must be unanimous.  The DGCL, on the other hand, permits stockholders to
take  action by the  written  consent  of at least the  minimum  number of votes
required to act at a stockholders meeting, unless the charter forbids it.

         Inspection of Stockholders List

                  The  NYBCL   requires  five  days'   written   notice  from  a
stockholder of record to inspect the list of record stockholders for any purpose
reasonably  related to the person's  interest as a stockholder.  Under the DGCL,
any stockholder  may inspect the  stockholders  list for any purpose  reasonably
related to the person's interest as a stockholder. In addition, for at least ten
days  prior to each  stockholders  meeting,  a  Delaware  corporation  must make
available  for  examination  a list  of  stockholders  entitled  to  vote at the
meeting.

         Vote Required for Certain Transactions

                  Until  February  1998,  the  NYBCL  required  the  holders  of
two-thirds of the outstanding stock of a New York corporation to approve certain
mergers,  consolidations  or sales of all or substantially all the corporation's
assets that may occur outside the ordinary  course of business.  Since  February
1998,  however,  a New York  corporation  may  provide in its  charter  that the
holders of a majority of the  outstanding  stock may approve such  transactions.
The Company has not adopted such a charter provision. Under the DGCL, holders of
a majority of the outstanding  stock entitled to vote on such  transactions have
the power to approve a merger, consolidation or sale of all or substantially all
the assets  without a special  provision  in the  charter,  unless  the  charter
provides  otherwise.  Furthermore,  in the  case of a  merger  under  the  DGCL,
stockholders  of the surviving  corporation do not have to approve the merger at
all, unless the charter provides otherwise, if these three conditions are met:

o    No amendment of the surviving  corporation's  charter is made by the merger
     agreement; and

o    Each  share of the  surviving  corporation's  stock  outstanding  or in the
     treasury  immediately prior to the effective date of the merger is to be an
     identical  outstanding or treasury share of the surviving corporation after
     the effective date; and

o    Either  no  shares  of common  stock of the  surviving  corporation  and no
     shares,  securities or  obligations  convertible  into such stock are to be
     issued or delivered  under the plan of merger,  or the authorized  unissued
     shares or the treasury shares of common stock of the surviving  corporation
     to be issued or  delivered  under the plan of merger  plus those  initially
     issuable upon conversion of any other shares,  securities or obligations to
     be issued or  delivered  under such plan do not exceed 20% of the shares of
     common stock of such constituent  corporation outstanding immediately prior
     to the effective date of the merger.

                  Special  vote  requirements  may  apply  to  certain  business
combinations  with interested  stockholders.  See the discussion below under the
heading "Business Combinations with Interested Stockholders."

         Classification of Directors

                  Both the  NYBCL  and the DGCL  permit  "classified"  boards of
directors, which means the directors have staggered terms that do not all expire
at the same time. The NYBCL permits as many as four classes, the DGCL permits as
many as three.  SoftNet-NY  currently has one class of  directors,  and the same
will be true for SoftNet-DE.

         Number of Directors

                  Under the NYBCL,  the number of directors  may be one or more,
and any number  may be fixed by the Bylaws or by the action of the  stockholders
or of the board of directors under the specific provisions of the Bylaws adopted
by the  stockholders,  and if not so fixed the number of directors shall be one.
The number of directors may be increased or decreased by amendment of the Bylaws
or by action of the stockholders or of the board of directors under the specific
provisions  of  a  Bylaw  adopted  by  the  stockholders,   subject  to  certain
limitations.  Under the DGCL, a corporation  may have as few as one director and
there is no  statutory  upper  limit on the number of  directors.  The  specific
number may be fixed in the Bylaws or the  charter,  but if fixed in the charter,
may be changed only by amendment of the charter.  If the charter is silent as to
the number of directors, the board of directors may fix or change the authorized
number of  directors  pursuant  to a  provision  of the  Bylaws.  The charter of
SoftNet-NY  provides that the Board of Directors shall determine the size of the
Board of Directors;  provided, however, that the Board of Directors size may not
be less than five  members.  Currently,  there are seven members of the Board of
Directors.  While the Board of  Directors  has no  current  plans to change  the
number of directors, it may decide to do so in the future.

         Removal of Directors

                  Under the NYBCL,  directors may be removed by the stockholders
for cause,  or by either the  stockholders  or the  directors  if the charter so
provides.  Furthermore,  if the charter or Bylaws so provide,  directors  may be
removed  without  cause  by a vote of the  stockholders.  The  Company's  Bylaws
provide that a director may not be removed  prior to the  expiration of his term
except for cause by a vote of the  stockholders.  Directors under the DGCL would
generally  be  subject to removal  with or  without  cause by a majority  of the
stockholders,  unless the charter provides  otherwise.  The Bylaws of SoftNet-DE
will allow for removal of directors for reasons other than cause as provided for
in the DGCL.

         Limitation of Directors' Liability

                  Both states  permit the  limitation  of a director's  personal
liability  while  acting in his or her  official  capacity.  Under the NYBCL,  a
director is not liable to the  corporation or to its  stockholders  for monetary
damages if the director has acted in good faith and with the same degree of care
that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise in similar  circumstances.  The
DGCL,  on the  other  hand,  requires  a charter  provision  in order to limit a
director's liability for breach of his or her fiduciary duty to the corporation.
The Company's  current  charter limits  liability of directors for any breach of
duty to the extent permitted by the Section 402(b) of the NYBCL, and the charter
of SoftNet-DE will likewise limit such liability to the fullest extent permitted
by the DGCL.

                  In  some  cases,   directors  may  be  liable   despite  these
limitations.  Under the  NYBCL,  for  example,  a director  is not  immune  from
liability  if he or  she  violates  applicable  statutes  which  expressly  make
directors  liable.  The DGCL forbids any limitation of liability if the director
breached his or her duty of loyalty to the corporation or its  stockholders,  or
if he or she failed to act in good faith,  received an improper personal benefit
from the  corporation,  or  authorized a dividend or stock  repurchase  that was
forbidden by the DGCL.

         Indemnification of Directors and Officers, and Insurance

                  With some  variations,  both the  NYBCL  and the DGCL  allow a
corporation to "indemnify,"  that is, to make whole,  any person who is or was a
director,  officer,  employee or agent of the corporation if that person is held
liable  for  something  he or she did or failed to do in an  official  capacity.
Besides covering court judgments, out-of-court settlements, fines and penalties,
both laws also allow the corporation to advance certain reasonable  expenses the
person will incur or to reimburse the person's  expenses  after he or she incurs
them,  even if liability is not actually  proven.  The right to  indemnification
under  both  laws  does not  normally  exclude  other  rights  of  recovery  the
indemnified person may have.

                  Additionally, both the NYBCL and the DGCL permit a corporation
to purchase insurance for its directors,  officers, employees and agents against
some or all of the costs of such  indemnification or against liabilities arising
from actions and omissions of the insured  person,  even though the  corporation
may not have power to indemnify the person against such liabilities.  The NYBCL,
however,  restricts  the  kinds  of  claims  that  may be made  under  insurance
purchased by the corporation against these liabilities. For example, there would
be no  insurance  coverage  if  the  person  to be  indemnified  was  guilty  of
deliberate  dishonesty  and that  dishonesty  was  material  to the  event  that
produced  the claim,  or if the person  gained  some  financial  profit or other
advantage that he or she was not entitled to.

                  However,    neither   the   NYBCL   nor   the   DGCL   permits
indemnification of a director,  officer,  employee or agent if a court finds the
person liable to the corporation itself,  unless the court determines otherwise.
Furthermore, if the corporation sues the person because of some act or omission,
the corporation  does not need to indemnify the person unless a court determines
the person was not liable.  Furthermore,  the DGCL  generally  requires that the
person to be indemnified must have acted in good faith and in a manner he or she
reasonably believed was consistent with the best interests of the corporation.

                  If  this   Proposal   One  is   approved   by  the   Company's
Stockholders,  the  indemnification  provisions of the NYBCL,  and not the DGCL,
will apply to acts and omissions that occurred  before the effective date of the
Reincorporation.

         Loans and Guarantees of Obligations for Directors

                  Under the  NYBCL,  the  holders  of a  majority  of the shares
entitled  to vote,  excluding  any shares of the  director  who is the  proposed
borrower, are required to approve any loans to, or guarantees of obligations of,
a  director.  Under  the  DGCL,  a board of  directors  may  authorize  loans or
guarantees of indebtedness to employees and officers,  including any employee or
officer who is a director.

         Issuance of Rights and Options to Directors, Officers and Employees

                  Under the NYBCL,  the  issuance  of any stock  rights or stock
options, as well as plans to issue rights or options, to directors,  officers or
employees  must be  approved  by a  majority  of  votes  cast at a  stockholders
meeting. The DGCL does not require stockholder approval of such transactions.

         Consideration for Shares

                  Under the NYBCL,  stock  certificates  cannot be issued  until
full  payment has been made,  except for shares  purchased  under a stock option
plan permitting installment payments. Under the DGCL, however, a corporation can
receive cash,  services,  personal or real property,  leases of real property or
any  combination  of  these as  payment  in full or in part  for the  shares.  A
purchaser  of shares  under the DGCL may pay an amount  equal to or greater than
the par value of such shares if the corporation receives a binding obligation of
the purchaser to pay the balance of the purchase price.

         Dividends and Redemption of Stock

                  Subject to its charter provisions, a corporation may generally
pay  dividends,  redeem  shares  of its  stock or make  other  distributions  to
stockholders  if the  corporation  is  solvent  and would not  become  insolvent
because of the dividend, redemption or distribution.  The assets applied to such
a distribution  may not be greater than the  corporation's  "surplus." The NYBCL
defines surplus as the excess of net assets over stated capital,  and allows the
board to adjust stated  capital.  The DGCL defines  surplus as the excess of net
assets over capital, and allows the board to adjust capital (for shares with par
value,  the capital need only equal the aggregate par value of such shares).  If
there is no surplus,  the DGCL allows the  corporation to apply net profits from
the current or preceding  fiscal year,  or both,  unless the  corporation's  net
assets are less than the capital  represented  by issued and  outstanding  stock
which has a preference on any distribution of assets.

                  Both the NYBCL and the DGCL permit  redemptions  only when the
corporation has  outstanding  shares of at least one class of voting stock which
is not subject to the redemption.

         Appraisal Rights

                  Generally,  "appraisal rights" entitle dissenting stockholders
to receive the fair value of their  shares in the merger or  consolidation  of a
corporation  or in the sale of all or  substantially  all its assets.  The NYBCL
also extends appraisal rights to an exchange of a corporation's shares.

                  The  NYBCL  provides  that  dissenting  stockholders  have  no
appraisal rights if their shares are listed on a national  securities  exchange.
If shares are not listed on an exchange,  appraisal rights under the NYBCL allow
any stockholder of a New York corporation,  with various exceptions,  to receive
fair value for his or her shares in such transactions.  Regardless of listing on
an exchange,  appraisal rights are available under the NYBCL in a merger between
a parent  corporation  and its  subsidiary  where only one of them is a New York
corporation,  or in a merger between a parent and subsidiary  where both are New
York  corporations  and the parent  owns at least 90% of the  subsidiary.  Also,
appraisal  rights are available to stockholders who are not allowed to vote on a
merger or consolidation  and whose shares will be canceled or exchanged for cash
or other  value  other  than  shares of the  surviving  corporation  or  another
corporation.  When appraisal  rights are available,  the stockholder may have to
request the appraisal and follow other required  procedures.  See the discussion
of  appraisal   rights  under  the  section   heading   "Rights  of   Dissenting
Stockholders."

                  Similarly,  under the DGCL, appraisal rights are not available
to a stockholder if the corporation's shares are listed on a national securities
exchange  or  held  by  more  than  2,000  stockholders  of  record,  or if  the
corporation will be the surviving corporation in a merger which does not require
the approval of the surviving corporation's stockholders. However, regardless of
listing on an exchange,  a dissenting  stockholder in a merger or  consolidation
has appraisal  rights under the DGCL if the  transaction  requires him or her to
exchange shares for anything of value other than one or more of the following:

o    Shares of stock of the surviving  corporation or of a new corporation which
     results from the merger or consolidation.

o    Shares of another corporation which will be listed on a national securities
     exchange or held by more than 2,000 stockholders of record after the merger
     or consolidation occurs.

o    Cash instead of fractional  shares of the surviving  corporation or another
     corporation.

         Business Combinations with Interested Stockholders

                  Provisions  in both laws may help to prevent or delay  changes
of corporate  control.  In  particular,  both the NYBCL and the DGCL restrict or
prohibit an interested  stockholder from entering into certain types of business
combinations unless the board of directors approves the transaction in advance.

                  Under  the  NYBCL,  an  interested  stockholder  is  generally
prohibited from entering into certain types of business  combinations with a New
York  corporation  for a period  of five  years  after  becoming  an  interested
stockholder,  unless  the  board  of  directors  approved  either  the  business
combination or the acquisition of stock by the interested stockholder before the
interested  stockholder acquired his or her shares. An "interested  stockholder"
under  the  NYBCL  is  generally  a  beneficial  owner  of at  least  20% of the
corporation's  outstanding voting stock. "Business combinations" under the NYBCL
include mergers and  consolidations  between  corporations or with an interested
stockholder;  sales,  leases,  mortgages or other  dispositions to an interested
stockholder of assets with an aggregate market value which either (1) equals 10%
or more of the corporation's  consolidated  assets or outstanding  stock, or (2)
represents  10% or more of the  consolidated  earning power or net income of the
corporation;  issues and transfers of stock with an aggregate market value of at
least 5% in relation to the outstanding stock of the corporation; liquidation or
dissolution of the  corporation  proposed by or in connection with an interested
stockholder;  reclassification  or recapitalization of stock that would increase
the proportionate stock ownership of an interested stockholder;  and the receipt
by an interested stockholder of benefit from loans, guarantees, pledges or other
financial assistance or tax benefits provided by the corporation.

                  After the five-year  period referred to in the NYBCL,  the law
allows such business combinations if either the board of directors or a majority
of the  outstanding  voting stock not owned by the interested  stockholder  have
approved the  business  combination  or the purchase of stock by the  interested
stockholder  before  the  interested  stockholder  acquired  his or her  shares.
Business  combinations  are also permitted when certain  statutory "fair price,"
requirements are met.

                  Section  203 of the DGCL  generally  prohibits  an  interested
stockholder  from entering into certain  types of business  combinations  with a
Delaware  corporation for three years after becoming an interested  stockholder.
An  "interested  stockholder"  under  the  DGCL is any  person  other  than  the
corporation  and its  majority-owned  subsidiaries  who owns at least 15% of the
outstanding  voting stock,  or who owned at least 15% within the preceding three
years,  and  this  definition  includes  affiliates  of  the  corporation.   The
prohibited combinations include:

o    Mergers or consolidations.

o    Sales,  leases,  exchanges or other  dispositions of 10% or more of (1) the
     aggregate  market  value  of all  assets  of  the  corporation  or (2)  the
     aggregate market value of all the outstanding stock of the corporation.

o    Issuances or transfers by the  corporation of its stock that would increase
     the proportionate share of stock owned by the interested stockholder.

o    Receipt by the interested  stockholder  of the benefit of loans,  advances,
     guarantees,   pledges  or  other   financial   benefits   provided  by  the
     corporation.

o    Any  other  transaction,   with  certain  exceptions,  that  increases  the
     proportionate share of the stock owned by the interested stockholder.

                  A Delaware corporation may choose not to be subject to Section
203. The Company has chosen,  however, to accept the protections of Section 203,
and  therefore  the  charter of  SoftNet-DE  will not waive  those  protections.
Nevertheless, Section 203 will not apply in the following cases:

o    If, before the stockholder became an interested  stockholder,  the board of
     directors  approved  the  business  combination  or  the  transaction  that
     resulted in the stockholder becoming an interested stockholder.

o    If, after the  transaction  that  resulted in the  stockholder  becoming an
     interested  stockholder,  the interested  stockholder owned at least 85% of
     the voting stock of the corporation outstanding at the time the transaction
     commenced, subject to technical calculation rules.

o    If, on or after the time the  interested  stockholder  became an interested
     stockholder,  the board of directors approved the business combination, and
     at least  two-thirds of the outstanding  voting stock which is not owned by
     the  interested  stockholder  also ratified the business  combination  at a
     stockholders, meeting.

Material  Changes  in the  SoftNet-DE  Charter  and Bylaws  from the  SoftNet-NY
Charter and Bylaws

                  The  SoftNet-DE  charter and Bylaws will be in effect and will
govern the rights of stockholders in the event this Proposal One is approved and
the merger of SoftNet-NY into SoftNet-DE takes place. The SoftNet-DE  charter is
substantially  similar to the  SoftNet-NY  charter.  Except  for the  provisions
relating to  indemnification  and  limitation  of liability,  authorized  stock,
stockholders'  ability to present proposals at stockholder meetings and nominate
directors,  stockholders'  ability to call special meetings,  cumulative voting,
and the  ability  to  remove  directors,  the  differences  between  the two are
primarily as a result of differences between the NYBCL and the DGCL as discussed
above.  Set forth below is a summary of the material  changes in the  SoftNet-DE
charter and Bylaws from the current SoftNet-NY charter and Bylaws. The Bylaws of
SoftNet-DE and SoftNet-NY  are  substantially  similar except that the Bylaws of
SoftNet-DE  reflect the DGCL and the  provisions of the SoftNet-DE  charter,  as
well as  certain  administrative  differences  described  below.  Copies  of the
charter and Bylaws of SoftNet-NY  are available for  inspection at the principal
office of SoftNet-NY and copies will be sent to stockholders upon request.

         Indemnification and Limitation of Liability

                  The SoftNet-DE charter and Bylaws provide for  indemnification
of directors and officers (including  provisions  authorizing the advancement of
expenses  incurred in connection  with certain  applicable  proceedings)  to the
fullest extent permitted by the DGCL.

                  Provisions   relating  to  indemnification  of  directors  and
officers of SoftNet-NY  are included in  SoftNet-NY's  Bylaws rather than in the
SoftNet-NY charter. Such provisions provide for indemnification of directors and
officers in certain situations.

                  The  SoftNet-DE  Bylaws  expressly  authorize  the  Company to
purchase  and maintain  directors  and  officers  liability  insurance to insure
against  liabilities or losses  incurred in such  capacities  whether or not the
corporation  would have the power to indemnify  the  individual  under the DGCL.
There are similar provisions in the SoftNet-NY Bylaws.

                  Furthermore,  the SoftNet-DE  charter provides that a director
of the corporation  shall not be liable to the  corporation or its  stockholders
for monetary  damages for breach of fiduciary  duty as a director to the fullest
extent  permitted by Delaware Law. This provision in the  SoftNet-DE  charter is
intended to afford  directors  additional  protection and limit their  potential
liability from suits  alleging a breach of the duty of care by a director.  As a
result  of the  inclusion  of such a  provision,  stockholders  may be unable to
recover  monetary  damages  against  directors  for  actions  taken by them that
constitute  negligence or that are otherwise in violation of their duty of care,
although it may be possible to obtain  injunctive or other equitable relief with
respect to such actions.  If equitable remedies are found not to be available to
stockholders in any particular situation, stockholders may not have an effective
remedy against a director in connection with such conduct.

                  In  general,  the  purpose of the  changes  in the  SoftNet-DE
charter  is to  provide  indemnification  and  exculpation  provisions  that are
customary in modern charter documents of Delaware corporations  (particularly in
charter  documents  of major,  public  corporations  that have  incorporated  in
Delaware).

         Changes in Authorized Capital Stock

                  The  SoftNet-NY   charter  authorizes  the  Company  to  issue
Twenty-Five Million (25,000,000) common shares,  having a par value of $0.01 per
share,  and Four Million  (4,000,000)  preferred  shares,  having a par value of
$0.10 per share.

                  The  SoftNet-DE  charter  authorizes  SoftNet-DE  to issue One
Hundred  Million  (100,000,000)  common shares,  having a par value of $0.01 per
share,  and Four Million  (4,000,000)  preferred  shares,  having a par value of
$0.10 per share.

                  Paragraph  Third of the  SoftNet-NY  charter now provides that
the  Company has the  authority  to issue two  classes of stock,  consisting  of
25,000,000  shares of common  stock and  4,000,000  shares of  Preferred  Stock.
Subject to approval of Proposal Two by the stockholders,  the SoftNet-DE charter
will  authorize  100,000,000  shares of common  stock  and  4,000,000  shares of
preferred stock, with no change in the voting powers, qualifications, rights and
privileges of such shares.  If Proposal Two is not approved by the stockholders,
SoftNet-DE's  charter  will  authorize  25,000,000  shares of  common  stock and
4,000,000  shares of Preferred  Stock. All classes of preferred stock authorized
in the  SoftNet-DE  charter will continue to be equal to each other with respect
to voting rights,  liquidation  rights and dividend rights.  The increase in the
number  of shares of  authorized  common  stock  will  give the  Company  better
flexibility to engage in certain transactions. See Proposal Two.

         Stockholder Proposals and Nominating Directors

                  The   SoftNet-NY   Bylaws   require  that,  to  be  effective,
stockholders provide to the Company written nominations of directors at least 45
days in advance of the annual  meeting of  stockholders,  or other meeting where
the election of directors is scheduled to occur, and is silent as to stockholder
presentation  of proposals  to be  considered  at annual or special  meetings of
stockholders.  The SoftNet-DE  charter  requires  stockholders to provide to the
Company  written  nominations  of directors  and  proposals to be  considered at
meetings of shareholders at least 60 days in advance of the proposed record date
of such meeting.

         Stockholder Ability to call Special Meetings

                  The  SoftNet-NY  Bylaws  permit the  Chairman  of the Board of
Directors,  the President or the Board of Directors to call special  meetings of
shareholders. In addition, the SoftNet-NY Bylaws require the Secretary to call a
special meeting of shareholders upon a written request setting forth the purpose
of such  meeting  of not  less  than 66 2/3% of the  outstanding  shares  of the
Company  entitled to vote for the election of directors.  The SoftNet-DE  Bylaws
will contain similar  provisions,  except that the Secretary will be required to
call a special meeting of shareholders upon written request of not less than 15%
of the  outstanding  shares of common  stock.  Such  request must be made to the
Board of Directors  at least 60 days prior to the  proposed  record date of such
special meeting.

         Cumulative Voting

                  The SoftNet-NY  charter provides for cumulative  voting in the
election  of  directors.  Cumulative  voting  allows a  stockholder  to give one
candidate  a number of votes  equal to the  number of  directors  to be  elected
multiplied by the number of shares of common stock held by such shareholder,  or
may distribute such votes among as many  candidates as the shareholder  chooses.
In this  way,  a  shareholder  with a  sufficient  minority  stake  can  elect a
director. The SoftNet-DE charter does not provide for cumulative voting.

         Ability to Remove Directors

                  The SoftNet-NY  charter  permits removal of directors only for
cause.  The  SoftNet-DE   charter  will  not  contain  such  a  provision,   and
shareholders will be able to remove directors for reasons other than cause.

         Other Changes to Reflect Technical Differences Between Delaware Law and
         New York Law

                  In addition to the changes described above,  certain technical
changes have been made in the SoftNet-DE  charter and Bylaws from the SoftNet-NY
charter and Bylaws to reflect  differences  between the DGCL and the NYBCL. Such
technical  changes  include:  designation of a registered  office and registered
agent in the State of  Delaware;  changes in the minimum  and maximum  number of
days applicable for giving notice of meetings and for setting record dates;  and
changing references in the Bylaws to place or to applicable law from New York to
Delaware.

Rights of Dissenting Stockholders
                  Section 910 of the NYBCL sets forth the rights of stockholders
of the Company who object to the Merger. Any stockholder of the Company who does
not vote in favor of this  Proposal  One or who duly  revokes his or her vote in
favor of the transaction  may, if the Merger is  consummated,  have the right to
seek to obtain  payment  in cash of the fair  value of his  shares  by  strictly
complying with the  requirements  of Section 623 of the New York NYBCL ("Section
623").

                  The dissenting  stockholder  must file with the Company before
the  taking  of the vote on this  Proposal  One a  written  objection  including
statement of election to dissent, such stockholder's name and residence address,
the number and  classes  of shares of stock as to which  dissent is made  (which
number may not be less than all of the shares as to which such stockholder has a
right to  dissent)  and a demand for payment of the fair value of such shares if
the Merger is consummated.  Any such written  objection  should be addressed to:
SoftNet  Systems Inc., 650 Townsend  Street,  San Francisco,  California  94103.
Attention: Steven M. Harris, Secretary.

                  Within   ten  (10)  days   after  the  vote  of   stockholders
authorizing  this  Proposal  One, the Company  must give written  notice of such
authorization to each such dissenting stockholder. Within twenty (20) days after
the giving of such notice,  any  stockholder  to whom the Company failed to give
notice of the Annual  Meeting  who elects to dissent  from the Merger  must file
with the Company a written notice of such election,  stating such  stockholder's
name and  residence  address,  the number  and  classes of shares of stock as to
which dissent is made (which number may not be less than all of the shares as to
which such  stockholder  has a right to dissent) and a demand for payment of the
fair value of such shares if the Merger is consummated.

                  At the time of filing  the  notice of  election  to dissent or
within one month thereafter,  dissenting  stockholders must submit  certificates
representing  the  applicable  shares  to the  Company  or its  transfer  agent,
ChaseMellon  Shareholder  Services  for  notation  thereon  of the  election  to
dissent, after which such certificates will be returned to the stockholder.  Any
stockholder who fails to submit his or her share  certificates for such notation
shall,  at  the  option  of the  Company  exercised  by  written  notice  to the
stockholder within forty-five (45) days from the date of filing of the notice of
election to dissent,  lose such  stockholder's  appraisal rights unless a court,
for good cause shown, shall otherwise direct.

                  Within  fifteen (15) days after the  expiration  of the period
within  which  stockholders  may file their  notices of election to dissent,  or
within fifteen (15) days after  consummation  of the Merger,  whichever is later
(but not later than ninety days after the  stockholders,  vote  authorizing  the
Merger),  the Company must make a written  offer  (which,  if the Merger has not
been consummated, may be conditioned upon such consummation) to each stockholder
who has filed such notice of election to pay for the shares at a specified price
which the  Company  considers  to be their fair  value.  If the  Company and the
dissenting  stockholder  are  unable  to agree  as to such  value,  Section  623
provides  for  judicial  determination  of fair  value.  In the  event of such a
disagreement,  a  proceeding  shall be  commenced  by the Company in the Supreme
Court  of the  State of New  York,  County  of New  York,  or by the  dissenting
stockholder  if the Company  fails to commence  the  proceeding  within the time
period  required  by Section 623 of the NYBCL.  The Company  intends to commence
such a proceeding in the event of such a disagreement.

                  A negative  vote on this  Proposal  One does not  constitute a
"written objection" filed by an objecting stockholder.  Failure by a stockholder
to vote against  this  Proposal  One will not,  however,  constitute a waiver of
rights under  Section 623 provided  that a written  objection  has been properly
filed and such stockholder has not voted in favor of this Proposal One.

                  The foregoing  does not purport to be a complete  statement of
the  provisions  of Section 623 and is qualified in its entirety by reference to
said  Section,  a copy  of  which  is  attached  in  full as  Appendix  B.  Each
stockholder  intending to exercise  dissenter's  rights should review Appendix B
carefully  and  consult  such  stockholder's  counsel  for a more  complete  and
definitive  statement of the rights of a dissenting  stockholder  and the proper
procedure to follow to exercise such rights.

                  Because  this  Proposal One does not involve any change in the
nature of the Company's business,  but only involves technical corporate matters
such as the  Reincorporation,  the Merger and the charter  amendments  described
herein,  management hopes that no stockholder will exercise a dissenter's right.
Under the Merger Agreement,  the Board of Directors may abandon the Merger, even
after stockholder  approval, if for any reason the Board of Directors determines
that it is inadvisable  to proceed with the Merger,  including  considering  the
number of shares for which appraisal  rights have been exercised and the cost to
the Company hereof.

Vote Required for Approval of this Proposal One

                  Approval of this  Proposal  One will  require the  affirmative
vote of at least two-thirds of the outstanding shares of SoftNet-NY common stock
entitled  to vote  thereon at the Annual  Meeting.  As of the Record  Date,  the
current Directors and officers of the Company have the right to vote ___________
shares, representing ____% of the outstanding common stock, and have advised the
Company  that  their  present  intent  is to vote in  favor of the  proposal  to
reincorporate in Delaware.  Proxies  solicited by the Board of Directors will be
voted FOR this Proposal One, unless a shareholder specifies otherwise.

Recommendation of the Board of Directors

                  THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  DEEMS  PROPOSAL ONE TO BE IN THE BEST
INTERESTS  OF THE  COMPANY  AND ITS  STOCKHOLDERS  AND  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR"
APPROVAL THEREOF.  UNLESS AUTHORITY TO DO SO IS WITHHELD, THE PERSON(S) NAMED IN
EACH PROXY WILL VOTE THE SHARES  REPRESENTED  THEREBY  "FOR" THE APPROVAL OF THE
MERGER AGREEMENT TO EFFECT THE REINCORPORATION IN DELAWARE.



<PAGE>


                                  PROPOSAL TWO

                           APPROVAL OF AN INCREASE OF
                          THE AUTHORIZED CAPITAL SHARES

                  The current  authorized  capital stock of the Company consists
of  25,000,000  shares of common  stock,  $.01 par value,  of which  ___________
shares of common stock were issued and  outstanding  as of the Record Date.  The
Board of  Directors,  on October 6, 1998,  adopted a resolution  to increase the
authorized number of shares of common stock from 25,000,000 to 100,000,000.  The
proposed  increase  would  change  the  Company's  capitalization  and  requires
approval of the stockholders.

                  Holders of common  stock are entitled to one vote per share on
all matters  submitted to a vote of  stockholders  of the Company and to ratably
receive dividends,  if any, as may be declared from time to time by the Board of
Directors from funds legally available therefor.  Upon liquidation,  dissolution
or winding up of the  Company,  holders of common  stock are  entitled  to share
ratably in any assets available for  distribution to stockholders  after payment
of all obligations of the Company.

                  If the proposed amendment is approved,  all or any part of the
authorized but unissued  shares of common stock may thereafter be issued without
further approval from the stockholders,  except as may be required by law or the
policies of any stock  exchange or stock  market on which the shares of stock of
the Company may be listed or quoted,  for such purposes and on such terms as the
Board of Directors may determine. Holders of the capital stock of the Company do
not have any  preemptive  rights to subscribe  for the purchase of any shares of
common stock, which means that current stockholders do not have a prior right to
purchase any new issue of common stock in order to maintain their  proportionate
ownership.

                  The proposed  amendment will not affect the rights of existing
holders of common stock  except to the extent that  further  issuances of common
stock will reduce each existing stockholder's proportionate ownership.

                  The  Board  of  Directors  has  determined  that it  would  be
appropriate  for the Company to increase the number of its authorized  shares of
common stock in order to have  additional  shares  available for possible future
acquisition  or  financing  transactions  and  other  issuances.  The  Board  of
Directors  believes that the complexity of customary  financing,  employment and
acquisition transactions requires that the Directors be able to respond promptly
and effectively to  opportunities  that involve the issuance of shares of common
stock. For example, if this Proposal Two is approved,  the Company will have the
flexibility  to  authorize  stock splits and stock  dividends  and to enter into
joint  ventures and  corporate  financings  involving  the issuance of shares of
common  stock.  The  Company  has  no  present  agreements,   understandings  or
arrangements   regarding  transactions  expected  to  require  issuance  of  the
additional  shares of common  stock that  would be  authorized  by the  proposed
amendment.  However,  the industry in which the Company is operating is changing
rapidly,  and  the  Company  is  continuously   evaluating  potential  strategic
relationships.

                  The flexibility of the Board of Directors to issue  additional
shares  of  common  stock  could  enhance  the Board of  Directors'  ability  to
negotiate on behalf of stockholders in a takeover situation.  Although it is not
the purpose of the proposed  amendment,  the authorized  but unissued  shares of
common stock also could be used by the Board of Directors to  discourage,  delay
or make more  difficult a change in control of the Company.  For  example,  such
shares could be privately placed with purchasers who might align themselves with
the Board of  Directors  in opposing a hostile  takeover  bid.  The  issuance of
additional  shares of common stock might serve to dilute the stock  ownership of
persons  seeking to obtain control and thereby  increase the cost of acquiring a
given percentage of the outstanding  shares. The Board of Directors is not aware
of any pending or proposed effort to acquire control of the Company.

                  If this  Proposal Two  (Approval  to Increase  the  Authorized
Capital  Shares)  is  adopted  by the  Company's  stockholders,  it will  become
effective  on either of (i) the date the merger  contemplated  by  Proposal  One
herein  (Reincorporation of the Company in Delaware) is effected if Proposal One
is approved by the Company's stockholders,  or (ii) on the date a certificate of
amendment is filed to amend  SoftNet-NY's  Certificate of  Incorporation  in New
York, if Proposal One is not approved by the Company's stockholders.

                  Approval of this Proposal Two requires the affirmative vote of
the holders of at least a majority of the shares of the common stock  present in
person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting.

Recommendation of the Board of Directors

                  THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  DEEMS  PROPOSAL TWO TO BE IN THE BEST
INTERESTS  OF THE  COMPANY  AND ITS  STOCKHOLDERS  AND  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR"
APPROVAL THEREOF.  UNLESS AUTHORITY TO DO SO IS WITHHELD, THE PERSON(S) NAMED IN
EACH PROXY WILL VOTE THE SHARES  REPRESENTED  THEREBY  "FOR" THE APPROVAL OF THE
INCREASE OF THE AUTHORIZED CAPITAL SHARES.



<PAGE>




                                 PROPOSAL THREE

                    APPROVAL OF the listing of the COMPANY'S
                     common stock on the nasdaq stock market

                  The common  stock is  currently  listed on AMEX.  The Board of
Directors,  on October 6, 1998, adopted a resolution to apply for trading of the
common stock over NASDAQ. The Company believes that shareholders would be better
served if the common  stock  traded over NASDAQ  because the common stock of the
majority  of  leading-edge  high  technology  growth  companies,  including  the
Company's  competitors,  are  included  for  trading  over  NASDAQ.  The Company
believes such change will increase the Company's  visibility  and make it easier
for  analysts and casual  observers  of the Company to follow the common  stock.
Upon approval for trading over NASDAQ, the common stock will no longer be traded
over AMEX.

                  Both AMEX and NASDAQ require  companies to comply with certain
corporate  governance  standards to maintain  listing,  which are  substantially
similar. In addition,  both AMEX and NASDAQ require  shareholder  approval of an
issuance of shares  exceeding 20% of the common stock  outstanding,  such as the
approval being sought by Proposal Five. The proposed trading of the common stock
over NASDAQ will not affect the rights of existing holders of common stock.

                  Approval of this  Proposal  Three by the  stockholders  is not
required  by New  York or  Delaware  law,  or by the  rules  of AMEX or  NASDAQ.
However, the Board of Directors believes it is appropriate to obtain stockholder
approval.  Therefore,  it is seeking  approval  by the  affirmative  vote of the
holders of a majority  of the  shares of the common  stock  present by person or
proxy and voting on this Proposal Three. In the event this Proposal Three is not
approved, the Company will reconsider its decision to move to NASDAQ.

Recommendation of the Board of Directors

                  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  DEEMS PROPOSAL THREE TO BE IN THE BEST
INTERESTS  OF THE  COMPANY  AND ITS  STOCKHOLDERS  AND  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR"
APPROVAL THEREOF.  UNLESS AUTHORITY TO DO SO IS WITHHELD, THE PERSON(S) NAMED IN
EACH PROXY WILL VOTE THE SHARES  REPRESENTED  THEREBY  "FOR" THE APPROVAL OF THE
TRADING OF THE COMMON STOCK OVER NASDAQ.



<PAGE>




                                  PROPOSAL FOUR

                        APPROVAL OF ADOPTION OF THE 1998
                              STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

                  The  Company's  stockholders  are being  asked to approve  the
adoption of the Company's new 1998 Stock  Incentive Plan (the "1998 Plan") under
which  2,850,668  shares of the  Company's  common stock have been  reserved for
issuance.  The Board of Directors  adopted the 1998 Plan on October 8, 1998 (the
"Effective Date"), subject to stockholder approval. The 1998 Plan is intended to
serve as a comprehensive  equity incentive  program for the Company's  officers,
employees,  and non-employee  Board members that will encourage such individuals
to remain in the Company's  service and more closely align their  interests with
those of the stockholders.

                  Upon  stockholder  approval of this Proposal,  all outstanding
options under the Company's 1995 Long Term Incentive Plan (the "1995 Plan") will
be  incorporated  into the 1998  Plan,  and no  further  option  grants or stock
issuances  will be made  under the 1995  Plan.  The  incorporated  options  will
continue  to be  governed  by their  existing  terms,  unless  the Stock  Option
Committee  as  administrator  of the 1998  Plan  elects  to  extend  one or more
features of the 1998 Plan to those options.

                  The  following is a summary of the  principal  features of the
1998 Plan.  Any  stockholder  of the  Company who wishes to obtain a copy of the
actual  plan  document  may do so upon  written  request  to the  Company at 650
Townsend Street,  San Francisco,  California 94103,  Attn: Mr. Steven M. Harris,
Secretary.

Equity Incentive Programs

                  The 1998 Plan consists of five (5) separate  equity  incentive
programs:  (i) the Discretionary  Option Grant Program,  (ii) the Stock Issuance
Program,  (iii) the Salary Investment  Option Grant Program,  (iv) the Automatic
Option  Grant  Program  and (v) the  Director  Fee  Option  Grant  Program.  The
principal  features  of each  program  are  described  below.  The Stock  Option
Committee  will have the  exclusive  authority to administer  the  Discretionary
Option Grant and Stock Issuance Programs with respect to option grants and stock
issuances to the Company's  executive  officers and non-employee  Board members.
Both the Stock Option  Committee  and the full Board will each have separate but
concurrent  authority  to make  option  grants and stock  issuances  under those
programs to all other eligible individuals. The Stock Option Committee will also
have complete discretion to select the individuals who are to participate in the
Salary  Investment  Option  Grant  Program,  but all grants made to the selected
individuals will be governed by the express terms of that program.

                  The term Plan  Administrator,  as used in this  summary,  will
mean either the Stock  Option  Committee  or the Board,  to the extent each such
entity is acting within the scope of its  administrative  jurisdiction under the
1998  Plan.  However,  neither  the Stock  Option  Committee  nor the Board will
exercise  any  administrative  discretion  under the  Automatic  Option Grant or
Director Fee Option Grant Program for the non-employee Board members. All grants
under those latter  programs will be made in strict  compliance with the express
provisions of each such program.

Share Reserve

                  A  total  of  2,850,668  shares  of  common  stock  have  been
authorized  for  issuance  over the term of the 1998 Plan.  Such  share  reserve
consists of (i) the number of shares that remain  available  for issuance  under
the 1995 Plan  (including  shares  subject to  outstanding  options) and (ii) an
additional increase of approximately  1,500,000 shares. In addition,  the number
of  shares  of  common  stock  reserved  for  issuance  under the 1998 Plan will
automatically  be  increased  on the first  trading day of each  calendar  year,
beginning in calendar  year 2000, by an amount equal to four percent (4%) of the
total  number of shares of common stock  outstanding  on the last trading day of
the  preceding  calendar  year,  but in no event will any such  annual  increase
exceed  2,000,000  shares,  subject to adjustment for  subsequent  stock splits,
stock dividends and similar transactions.

                  No  participant  in the 1998 Plan may receive  option  grants,
separately  exercisable stock appreciation  rights or direct stock issuances for
more than 500,000  shares of common stock in the  aggregate  per calendar  year,
subject to adjustment for subsequent  stock splits,  stock dividends and similar
transactions.  Stockholder  approval  of  this  Proposal  will  also  constitute
approval of the  500,000-share  limitation for purposes of Internal Revenue Code
Section 162(m).

                  The shares of common stock issuable under the 1998 Plan may be
drawn from shares of the Company's  authorized but unissued common stock or from
shares of common stock reacquired by the Company,  including shares  repurchased
on the open market.

                  Shares subject to any outstanding  options under the 1998 Plan
(including options  incorporated from the predecessor 1995 Plan) which expire or
otherwise terminate prior to exercise will be available for subsequent issuance.
Unvested shares issued under the 1998 Plan and  subsequently  repurchased by the
Company  pursuant  to its  repurchase  rights  under  the 1998 Plan will also be
available for subsequent issuance.

Eligibility

                  Employees,   non-employee   Board   members  and   independent
consultants  in the  service  of the  Company  or its  parent  and  subsidiaries
(whether  now  existing  or  subsequently   established)  will  be  eligible  to
participate in the Discretionary  Option Grant and Stock Issuance Programs.  The
Company's  executive  officers  and other  highly  paid  employees  will also be
eligible to  participate  in the Salary  Investment  Option Grant  Program,  and
non-employee  members of the Board will also be eligible to  participate  in the
Automatic Option Grant and Director Fee Option Grant Programs.

                  As of December  31,  1998,  [five]  executive  officers,  five
non-employee   Board  members  and  approximately   [250]  other  employees  and
consultants were eligible to participate in the  Discretionary  Option Grant and
Stock Issuance Programs.  The [five] executive officers and approximately  [250]
other  individuals were eligible to participate in the Salary  Investment Option
Grant Program,  and the [five]  non-employee Board members were also eligible to
participate  in the  Automatic  Option  Grant  and  Director  Fee  Option  Grant
Programs.

Valuation

                  The  fair  market  value  per  share  of  common  stock on any
relevant date under the 1998 Plan is currently deemed to be equal to the closing
selling  price  per  share on that date on AMEX.  However,  if the  stockholders
approve  Proposal  Three under which they are being asked to approve the trading
of the common  stock over  NASDAQ,  then upon the  commencement  of trading over
NASDAQ,  the fair market value per share of common  stock on any  relevant  date
under the 1998 Plan will be deemed equal to the closing  price per share on that
date on NASDAQ. On December 11, 1998 the closing selling price per share on AMEX
was $14.8125.

Discretionary Option Grant Program

                  The  options  granted  under the  Discretionary  Option  Grant
Program  may be either  incentive  stock  options  under the federal tax laws or
non-statutory options. Each granted option will have an exercise price per share
not less than one hundred  percent  (100%) of the fair market value per share of
common stock on the option grant date, and no granted option will have a term in
excess of ten (10) years.  The shares subject to each option will generally vest
in one or more installments over a specified period of service measured from the
grant date.

                  Upon  cessation of service,  the optionee  will have a limited
period  of time in  which to  exercise  any  outstanding  option  to the  extent
exercisable  for  vested  shares.  The Plan  Administrator  will  have  complete
discretion to extend the period  following the  optionee's  cessation of service
during  which  his  or  her  outstanding  options  may be  exercised  and/or  to
accelerate  the  exercisability  or vesting of such options in whole or in part.
Such  discretion  may  be  exercised  at  any  time  while  the  options  remain
outstanding, whether before or after the optionee's actual cessation of service.

                  The Plan  Administrator  is  authorized  to issue two types of
stock  appreciation  rights in  connection  with  option  grants  made under the
Discretionary Option Grant Program:

                  Tandem stock  appreciation  rights  which  provide the holders
         with  the  right  to  surrender   their  options  for  an  appreciation
         distribution  from the Company equal in amount to the excess of (a) the
         fair market value of the vested  shares of common stock  subject to the
         surrendered  option over (b) the aggregate  exercise  price payable for
         such shares.  Such appreciation  distribution may, at the discretion of
         the Plan Administrator, be made in cash or in shares of common stock.

                  Limited  stock  appreciation  rights  which may be  granted to
         officers of the Company as part of their option grants. Any option with
         such a limited stock  appreciation right may (whether or not the option
         is at the time  exercisable  for vested  shares) be  surrendered to the
         Company upon the  successful  completion of a hostile  tender offer for
         more than  fifty  percent  (50%) of the  Company's  outstanding  voting
         securities.  In return for the surrendered  option, the officer will be
         entitled  to a cash  distribution  from the  Company  in an amount  per
         surrendered  option  share equal to the excess of (a) the tender  offer
         price  paid per share over (b) the  exercise  price  payable  per share
         under such option.

                  The Plan  Administrator  will have the authority to effect the
cancellation of outstanding options under the Discretionary Option Grant Program
which have exercise  prices in excess of the then current market price of common
stock and to issue  replacement  options  with an  exercise  price  based on the
market price of common stock at the time of the new grant.

Salary Investment Option Grant Program

                  The  Plan  Administrator  will  have  complete  discretion  in
implementing the Salary Investment Option Grant Program for one or more calendar
years and in selecting the executive officers and other eligible individuals who
are to  participate  in the program  for those  years.  As a  condition  to such
participation, each selected individual must, prior to the start of the calendar
year  of  participation,   file  with  the  Plan  Administrator  an  irrevocable
authorization  directing  the  Company to reduce his or her base  salary for the
upcoming  calendar  year by a specified  dollar amount not less than $10,000 nor
more than $50,000 and apply that amount to the  acquisition  of a special option
grant under the program.

                  If such  election is approved by the Plan  Administrator,  the
individual will automatically be granted, on the first trading day in January of
the  calendar  year for  which  that  salary  reduction  is to be in  effect,  a
non-statutory  option  to  purchase  that  number  of  shares  of  common  stock
determined  by  dividing  the  amount  of the  authorized  salary  reduction  by
two-thirds of the fair market value per share of common stock on the grant date.
The option will be  exercisable  at a price per share equal to  one-third of the
fair market value of the option shares on the grant date. As a result, the total
spread on the option  shares at the time of grant (the fair market  value of the
option  shares on the grant date less the aggregate  exercise  price payable for
those  shares)  will be equal to the salary  reduction  amount.  The option will
become  exercisable in a series of twelve (12) equal monthly  installments  over
the calendar  year for which the salary  investment  is to be in effect and will
become  exercisable in full on an accelerated  basis upon certain changes in the
ownership or control of the Company. Each option will remain exercisable for any
vested shares  subject to the option until the earlier of (i) the  expiration of
the ten  (10)-year  option  term or (ii) the end of the  three  (3)-year  period
measured from the date of the optionee's cessation of service.

Stock Issuance Program

                  Shares may be issued under the Stock Issuance Program for such
valid  consideration  under the  Delaware  General  Corporation  Law as the Plan
Administrator deems appropriate, provided the value of such consideration is not
less than the fair market  value of the issued  shares on the date of  issuance.
Shares may also be issued solely as a bonus for past services.

                  The shares  issued as a bonus for past  services will be fully
vested upon issuance.  All other shares issued under the program will be subject
to a vesting  schedule tied to the  performance  of service or the attainment of
performance  goals.  The Plan  Administrator  will  have the sole and  exclusive
authority,  exercisable upon a participant's termination of service, to vest any
or all unvested shares of common stock at the time held by that participant,  to
the extent the Plan  Administrator  determines  that such  vesting  provides  an
appropriate severance benefit under the circumstances.

Automatic Option Grant Program

                  Each  individual  who  is  first  elected  or  appointed  as a
non-employee  Board  member  at any time on or after  the  Effective  Date  will
automatically be granted, on the date of such initial election or appointment, a
non-statutory  option to purchase  20,000 shares of common stock,  provided that
individual has not  previously  been in the employ of the Company (or any parent
or subsidiary).  In addition, each such individual will automatically be granted
one or more additional  non-statutory options for 20,000 shares of common stock,
with the  first  such  additional  20,000-share  grant to be made at the  Annual
Stockholders Meeting which is held in the third calendar year after the calendar
year in which he or she received the initial  20,000-share  grant,  and any such
additional  20,000-share  grants to be made at every third  Annual  Stockholders
Meeting held thereafter.  However,  such additional  20,000-share  option grants
will only be made to each non-employee  Board member who is to continue to serve
as such after the Annual  Meeting at which the  additional  20,000-share  option
grant is to be made.

                  Each individual who is serving as a non-employee  Board member
as of the Effective Date will  automatically  be granted a non-statutory  option
for 20,000  shares of common  stock at the Annual  Stockholders  Meeting held in
2001 and, thereafter,  will automatically be granted an additional  20,000-share
option  at  each  third  Annual  Stockholders  Meeting  held  after  the  Annual
Stockholders  Meeting held in 2001.  However,  any such  20,000-share  automatic
option  grants  will only be made to each  non-employee  Board  member who is to
continue  to serve as such  following  the Annual  Meeting at which such  option
grant is to be made.

                  There  will be no  limit  on the  number  of  such  additional
20,000-share  option grants any one  non-employee  Board member may receive over
his or her period of Board  service,  and  non-employee  Board  members who have
previously  been in the employ of the Company (or any parent or  subsidiary)  or
who have  otherwise  received a stock option grant from the Company prior to the
Effective  Date  will  be  eligible  to  receive  one or  more  such  additional
20,000-share option grants over their period of continued Board service.

                  Each option under the Automatic Option Grant Program will have
an exercise  price per share equal to 100% of the fair market value per share of
common stock on the option  grant date and a maximum term of ten years  measured
from the grant date.  The option  will be  immediately  exercisable  for all the
option  shares,  but any  purchased  shares will be subject to repurchase by the
Company, at the exercise price paid per share, upon the optionee's  cessation of
Board  service  prior to vesting  in those  shares.  The shares  subject to each
automatic  option  grant will vest (and the  Company's  repurchase  rights  will
lapse) in six (6) equal semi-annual  installments upon the optionee's completion
of each six (6) months of Board service over the  thirty-six  (36)-month  period
measured from the option grant date.

                  The shares subject to each outstanding  automatic option grant
will  immediately  vest should the optionee die or become  permanently  disabled
while a Board  member or should  any of the  following  events  occur  while the
optionee continues in Board service: (i) an acquisition of the Company by merger
or asset sale or (ii) the  successful  completion of a hostile  tender offer for
more than fifty percent (50%) of the outstanding  voting  securities or a change
in the majority of the Board  occasioned by one or more contested  elections for
Board  membership.  Each automatic  option grant held by an optionee upon his or
her termination of Board service will remain exercisable,  for any or all of the
option  shares in which the optionee is vested at the time of such  termination,
for up to a twelve (12)-month period following such termination date.

                  Each  option  granted  under the  program  will have a limited
stock  appreciation right which will allow the optionee to surrender that option
to the Company upon the successful completion of a hostile tender offer for more
than fifty percent  (50%) of the Company's  outstanding  voting  securities.  In
return for the  surrendered  option,  the  optionee  will be  entitled to a cash
distribution from the Company in an amount per surrendered option share equal to
the excess of (a) the tender  offer  price paid per share over (b) the  exercise
price payable per share under such option. Stockholder approval of this Proposal
will  also  constitute  pre-approval  of the grant of each  such  limited  stock
appreciation right and the subsequent  exercise of that right in accordance with
the foregoing provisions.

Director Fee Option Grant Program

                  For each  calendar  year that the  Director  Fee Option  Grant
Program is in effect, as determined by the Plan Administrator, each non-employee
Board  member may elect to apply all or a portion of his or her annual  retainer
fee  otherwise  payable in cash that year  (currently  $1,000 for  directors and
$2,500 for the Chairman) to the  acquisition of a special option grant under the
Director Fee Option Grant Program.  The election must be made prior to the start
of the calendar year for which such  election  will be in effect,  and the grant
will  automatically  be made on the first  trading day in January  following the
filing of such election.  The option will have an exercise price per share equal
to one-third  of the fair market  value of the option  shares on the grant date,
and the number of option shares will be determined by dividing the dollar amount
of the  retainer fee subject to the  election by  two-thirds  of the fair market
value per share of common stock on the option grant date. As a result, the total
spread on the option  (the fair market  value of the option  shares on the grant
date less the aggregate  exercise  price payable for those shares) will be equal
to the portion of the retainer fee subject to the  non-employee  Board  member's
election. Stockholder approval of this Proposal will also constitute approval of
each option  grant made  pursuant to the  provisions  of the Director Fee Option
Grant Program and the subsequent  exercise of that option in accordance with the
terms of such program.

                  Each option granted under the program will become  exercisable
for the  option  shares in a series  of twelve  (12)  successive  equal  monthly
installments  upon the  optionee's  completion  of each  month of Board  service
during the calendar year of the option grant.  In the event the optionee  ceases
Board  service for any reason  (other than death or permanent  disability),  the
option will  immediately  terminate  with respect to any option shares for which
the option is not  otherwise  at that time  exercisable.  Should the  optionee's
service as a Board  member  ceases by reason of death or  permanent  disability,
then the option will immediately become exercisable for all the shares of common
stock subject to the option. Each option may be exercised, for any or all of the
shares for which that  option is at the time  exercisable,  until the earlier of
(i) the expiration of the ten (10)-year option term or (ii) the end of the three
(3)-year  period  measured  from the date of the  optionee's  cessation of Board
service.

                  Each  option  granted  under the  program  will have a limited
stock  appreciation right which will allow the optionee to surrender that option
to the Company upon the successful completion of a hostile tender offer for more
than fifty percent  (50%) of the Company's  outstanding  voting  securities.  In
return for the  surrendered  option,  the  optionee  will be  entitled to a cash
distribution from the Company in an amount per surrendered option share equal to
the excess of (a) the tender  offer  price paid per share over (b) the  exercise
price payable per share under such option. Stockholder approval of this Proposal
will  also  constitute  pre-approval  of the grant of each  such  limited  stock
appreciation right and the subsequent  exercise of that right in accordance with
the foregoing provisions.

Stock Awards

                  The table below shows, as to Company's Chief Executive Officer
("CEO"),  the three most highly  compensated  executive  officers of the Company
other  than the CEO (with  base  salary  and bonus for the past  fiscal  year in
excess of $100,000),  and the other individuals and groups indicated, the number
of shares of common stock subject to options granted under the 1998 Plan and the
predecessor  1995  Plan  between  the date of the  adoption  of the  1995  Plan,
September 15, 1995,  and December 11, 1998,  together with the weighted  average
exercise  price  payable per share.  The  Company has not made any direct  stock
issuances  or granted  any SARs to date  under  either the 1998 Plan or the 1995
Plan.

                               OPTION TRANSACTIONS

                                                   NUMBER OF      WEIGHTED
                                                     SHARES       AVERAGE
                                                   UNDERLYING     EXERCISE
                                                    OPTIONS      PRICE PER
NAME AND POSITION                                   GRANTED        SHARE 
- ------------------------------------------------ ------------   -----------

                                                                     
Dr. Lawrence B.  Brilliant......................      455,000        $ 7.55
  President and Chief Executive Officer
Garrett J.  Girvan..............................      200,000          7.89
  Chief Operating Officer
Douglas S. Sinclair.............................      180,000         10.50
  Chief Financial Officer
Steven M. Harris................................      100,000          7.38
  Vice President and Secretary
Ian B.  Aaron...................................      320,000          6.74
  Vice President, SoftNet Systems, Inc.
  and President, ISP Channel, Inc.
All current executive officers as a group (five)    1,255,000          7.81
All current non-employee directors as a group         265,000          8.76
(five)..........................................
All employees, including current officers who
are not executive officers, as a group .........    1,061,925          7.09

                  As of December 11, 1998, 1,305,067 shares of common stock were
subject to  outstanding  options  under the 1995 Plan,  45,601  shares  remained
available  for  future  option  grant and  152,540  shares  have been  issued in
connection with option exercises.  As of December 11, 1998,  2,562,567 shares of
common stock were subject to outstanding  options under the 1998 Plan (including
those  shares  rolled into the 1998 Plan from the 1995 Plan),  and no shares had
been issued under the 1998 Plan.

                  The Company also maintains the Employee Stock Option Plan (the
"Employee  Option  Plan")  under which  40,000  shares of common stock have been
reserved for issuance to employees  of the  Company's  wholly owned  subsidiary,
Micrographic  Technology  Corporation  ("MTC"). As of December 11, 1998, options
covering  19,358  shares of common  stock were  outstanding  under the  Employee
Option Plan, no shares  remained  available  for future option grant,  and 3,208
shares  have been  issued  under the  Employee  Option  Plan  pursuant to option
exercises.

New Plan Benefits

                  The following table lists, as of December 11, 1998, the number
of  shares  subject  to  options  granted  to the CEO,  the  three  most  highly
compensated  executive  officers  of the  Company  other than the CEO (with base
salary and bonus for the last fiscal year in excess of  $100,000)  and the other
groups  indicated  which will not  become  exercisable  unless the  stockholders
approve this Proposal.  Such options were initially  granted under the 1995 Plan
but are to be incorporated into the 1998 Plan upon stockholder  approval of this
Proposal.  In the event that the stockholders do not approve the adoption of the
1998  Plan,  the  following   options  will  terminate   without  ever  becoming
exercisable for the option shares.


                            1998 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

                                                                  WEIGHTED
                                                                   AVERAGE
                                                    NUMBER OF     EXERCISE
                                                     OPTIONS         PRICE
NAME AND POSITION                                    SHARES       
- ------------------------------------------------  ------------   -----------

                                                                     
Dr. Lawrence B.  Brilliant......................      255,000       $ 7.375
  President and Chief Executive Officer
Garrett J.  Girvan..............................      125,000         7.375
  Chief Operating Officer
Douglas S. Sinclair.............................      180,000        10.500
  Chief Financial Officer
Steven M. Harris................................      100,000         7.375
  Vice President and Secretary
Ian B.  Aaron...................................       98,500         7.375
  Vice President, SoftNet Systems, Inc.
  and President, ISP Channel, Inc.
All current executive officers as a group (five)      758,500         8.120
All current non-employee directors as a group          10,000         7.375
(five)..........................................
All employees, including current officers who
are not executive officers, as a group .........      489,925         7.375

                  Each such option  granted  under the 1995 Plan has an exercise
prices per share equal to the fair market value of the common stock on the grant
date and no option  has a term in excess  of ten years  measured  from the grant
date. The option generally becomes  exercisable in a series of installments over
the  optionee's  period of service with the Company.  Upon an acquisition of the
Company  pursuant to a merger or asset sale,  the option will, at the discretion
of the Stock Option Committee,  either be assumed by any successor entity,  with
or without  accelerated  vesting of the option  shares,  or  terminate  upon the
acquisition  following a thirty  (30)-day period during which the option will be
exercisable in full on an accelerated basis.

General Provisions

         Acceleration

                  In the event that the  Company is  acquired by merger or asset
sale, each outstanding option under the Discretionary  Option Grant Program will
automatically accelerate in full, unless assumed by the successor corporation or
replaced with a cash incentive  program which  preserves the spread  existing on
the unvested  option shares (the excess of the fair market value of those shares
over the option  exercise  price  payable  for such  shares)  and  provides  for
subsequent payout in accordance with the same vesting schedule in effect for the
option.  In addition,  all unvested shares  outstanding  under the Discretionary
Option Grant and Stock Issuance  Programs will immediately  vest,  except to the
extent the  Company's  repurchase  rights with respect to those shares are to be
assigned to the successor corporation. The Plan Administrator will have complete
discretion  to grant one or more options  under the  Discretionary  Option Grant
Program  which will become fully  exercisable  for all the option  shares in the
event those options are assumed in the  acquisition  and the optionee's  service
with the Company or the acquiring entity  terminates  within a designated period
following such  acquisition.  The vesting of outstanding  shares under the Stock
Issuance  Program may also be structured  to  accelerate  upon similar terms and
conditions.

                  The Plan  Administrator  will also have the authority to grant
options which will immediately vest upon an acquisition of the Company,  whether
or not  those  options  are  assumed  by the  successor  corporation.  The  Plan
Administrator is also authorized under the Discretionary  Option Grant and Stock
Issuance  Programs to grant options and to structure  repurchase  rights so that
the shares subject to those options or repurchase  rights will  immediately vest
in  connection  with a change in control of the Company  (whether by  successful
tender offer for more than fifty percent (50%) of the  outstanding  voting stock
or a change in the  majority  of the  Board by  reason of one or more  contested
elections for Board  membership),  with such vesting to occur either at the time
of such change in control or upon the subsequent termination of the individual's
service within a designated  period (not to exceed  eighteen  months)  following
such change in control.

                  Each option  outstanding  under the Salary  Investment  Option
Grant,  Automatic  Option Grant and Director Fee Option Grant Programs will also
automatically  accelerate  in the event the Company  should be acquired or other
change in control of the Company occur.

                  The  outstanding  options  under the 1995 Plan which are to be
incorporated  into the 1998 Plan will,  at the  discretion  of the Stock  Option
Committee,  either be assumed by the successor  entity in any acquisition of the
Company,  with or without accelerated vesting of the option shares, or terminate
upon the acquisition  following a thirty (30)-day period during which the option
will be  exercisable  in full on an  accelerated  basis.  In addition,  the Plan
Administrator  will have the  discretion  to extend  one or more of the  vesting
acceleration provisions of the 1998 Plan to those options.

                  The  acceleration  of  vesting in the event of a change in the
ownership  or control of the Company may be seen as an  anti-takeover  provision
and may have the effect of discouraging a merger proposal, a takeover attempt or
other efforts to gain control of the Company.

         Financial Assistance

                  The Plan  Administrator may institute a loan program to assist
one or more participants in financing the exercise of outstanding options or the
purchase of shares under the 1998 Plan.  The Plan  Administrator  will determine
the terms of any such  assistance.  However,  the  maximum  amount of  financing
provided any participant may not exceed the cash  consideration  payable for the
issued  shares  plus  all  applicable  taxes  incurred  in  connection  with the
acquisition of the shares.

         Changes in Capitalization

                  In the event any change is made to the  outstanding  shares of
common stock by reason of any  recapitalization,  stock  dividend,  stock split,
combination of shares, exchange of shares or other change in corporate structure
effected without the Company's receipt of consideration, appropriate adjustments
will be made to (i) the maximum number and/or class of securities issuable under
the 1998 Plan,  (ii) the number  and/or  class of  securities  for which any one
person may be granted stock options,  separately  exercisable stock appreciation
rights and direct stock issuances  under the 1998 Plan per calendar year,  (iii)
the maximum number and/or class of securities which may be issued under the 1998
Plan,  (iv)  the  number  and/or  class  of  securities  for  which  grants  are
subsequently  to be made under the  Automatic  Option  Grant  Program to new and
continuing  non-employee  Board  members  and (v) the  number  and/or  class  of
securities  and the exercise  price per share in effect  under each  outstanding
option in order to prevent the dilution or enlargement of benefits thereunder.

         Amendment and Termination

                  The  Board  may  amend or  modify  the 1998 Plan in any or all
respects whatsoever subject to any required stockholder approval.  The Board may
terminate  the 1998  Plan at any  time,  and the 1998  Plan  will in all  events
terminate on October 6, 2008.

Federal Income Tax Consequences

         Option Grants

                  Options  granted  under the 1998 Plan may be either  incentive
stock  options  which  satisfy the  requirements  of Section 422 of the Internal
Revenue  Code or  non-statutory  options  which  are not  intended  to meet such
requirements.  The  Federal  income tax  treatment  for the two types of options
differs as follows:

                  Incentive  Options.  No taxable  income is  recognized  by the
optionee at the time of the option  grant,  and no taxable  income is  generally
recognized  at the time the option is  exercised.  The optionee  will,  however,
recognize  taxable income in the year in which the purchased  shares are sold or
otherwise  disposed of. For Federal tax purposes,  dispositions are divided into
two categories: (i) qualifying and (ii) disqualifying.  A qualifying disposition
occurs if the sale or other  disposition is made after the optionee has held the
shares for more than two (2) years after the option grant date and more than one
(1) year after the exercise date. If either of these two holding  periods is not
satisfied, then a disqualifying disposition will result.

                  If the  optionee  makes  a  disqualifying  disposition  of the
purchased shares,  then the Company will be entitled to an income tax deduction,
for the taxable year in which such  disposition  occurs,  equal to the excess of
(i) the fair market value of such shares on the option  exercise  date over (ii)
the exercise price paid for the shares. In no other instance will the Company be
allowed a deduction with respect to the optionee's  disposition of the purchased
shares.

                  Non-Statutory  Options.  No taxable income is recognized by an
optionee upon the grant of a non-statutory  option. The optionee will in general
recognize  ordinary income, in the year in which the option is exercised,  equal
to the excess of the fair market value of the  purchased  shares on the exercise
date over the  exercise  price paid for the  shares,  and the  optionee  will be
required to satisfy the tax withholding requirements applicable to such income.

                  If the shares  acquired  upon  exercise  of the  non-statutory
option are unvested and subject to repurchase by the Company in the event of the
optionee's  termination  of service prior to vesting in those  shares,  then the
optionee will not recognize any taxable  income at the time of exercise but will
have to report as ordinary  income,  as and when the Company's  repurchase right
lapses, an amount equal to the excess of (i) the fair market value of the shares
on the date the  repurchase  right lapses over (ii) the exercise  price paid for
the shares. The optionee may, however, elect under Section 83(b) of the Internal
Revenue Code to include as ordinary income in the year of exercise of the option
an amount  equal to the  excess of (i) the fair  market  value of the  purchased
shares on the exercise  date over (ii) the exercise  price paid for such shares.
If the Section  83(b)  election is made,  the optionee  will not  recognize  any
additional income as and when the repurchase right lapses.

                  The Company will be entitled to an income tax deduction  equal
to the amount of ordinary income  recognized by the optionee with respect to the
exercised non-statutory option. The deduction will in general be allowed for the
taxable year of the Company in which such  ordinary  income is recognized by the
optionee.

         Stock Appreciation Rights

                  No taxable  income is  recognized  upon receipt of an SAR. The
holder  will  recognize  ordinary  income,  in the  year  in  which  the  SAR is
exercised,  in an amount  equal to the  excess of the fair  market  value of the
underlying  shares of common stock on the  exercise  date over the base price in
effect for the exercised  right,  and the holder will be required to satisfy the
tax withholding requirements applicable to such income.

                  The Company will be entitled to an income tax deduction  equal
to the amount of ordinary income recognized by the holder in connection with the
exercise of an SAR. The deduction  will be allowed for the taxable year in which
such ordinary income is recognized.

         Direct Stock Issuances

                  The tax principles  applicable to direct stock issuances under
the 1998 Plan will be  substantially  the same as those summarized above for the
exercise of non-statutory option grants.

Deductibility of Executive Compensation

                  The Company  anticipates that any compensation  deemed paid by
it in  connection  with  disqualifying  dispositions  of incentive  stock option
shares or exercises of non-statutory  options will qualify as  performance-based
compensation  for purposes of Code Section  162(m) and will not have to be taken
into account for purposes of the $1 million limitation per covered individual on
the deductibility of the compensation paid to certain executive  officers of the
Company. Accordingly, all compensation deemed paid with respect to those options
will remain  deductible  by the Company  without  limitation  under Code Section
162(m).

Accounting Treatment

                  Under current accounting principles, neither the grant nor the
exercise of options  granted under the 1998 Plan with  exercise  prices equal to
the fair market value of the option  shares on the grant date will result in any
charge to the Company's reported earnings.  However,  the Company must disclose,
in footnotes and pro-forma statements to the Company's financial statements, the
impact those options would have upon the  Company's  reported  earnings were the
value of those options at the time of grant treated as a  compensation  expense.
In  addition,  the number of  outstanding  options  under the 1998 Plan may be a
factor in determining the Company's earnings per share on a fully-diluted basis.

                  Should one or more  optionees  be  granted  SARs which have no
conditions upon exercisability other than an employment  requirement,  then such
rights will result in  compensation  expense to the Company's  earnings over the
period such rights remain outstanding.

Vote Required

                  The  affirmative  vote of at least a majority of the shares of
common stock present in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting is required for
approval of the adoption of the 1998 Plan.  If such  approval is obtained,  then
all outstanding  options under the 1995 Plan will be incorporated  into the 1998
Plan, and the 1995 Plan will terminate.  Should such stockholder approval not be
obtained,  then any stock  options  granted  under the 1998 Plan will  terminate
without ever  becoming  exercisable  for the shares of common  stock  subject to
those options, and no further option grants will be made under the 1998 Plan. In
addition,  the option grants made under the 1995 Plan which are contingent  upon
their  incorporation  into the 1998 Plan with its  increased  share reserve will
also terminate prior to their becoming exercisable for any of the option shares.
However,  the  1995  Plan  will  remain  in  effect  as  last  approved  by  the
stockholders,  and option  grants and direct stock  issuances may continue to be
made under that Plan until the available share reserve has been issued.

Recommendation of the Board of Directors

                  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  DEEMS  PROPOSAL FOUR TO BE IN THE BEST
INTERESTS  OF THE  COMPANY  AND ITS  STOCKHOLDERS  AND  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR"
APPROVAL OF SUCH PROPOSAL.  UNLESS AUTHORITY TO DO SO IS WITHHELD, THE PERSON(S)
NAMED IN EACH PROXY WILL VOTE THE SHARES REPRESENTED  THEREBY "FOR" THE APPROVAL
OF THE ADOPTION OF THE SOFTNET SYSTEMS, INC. 1998 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN.



<PAGE>


                                  PROPOSAL FIVE

AUTHORIZATION  AND  APPROVAL  OF THE  ISSUANCE  OF THE COMMON  STOCK  UNDERLYING
CONVERTIBLE  PREFERRED STOCK AND WARRANTS TO PURCHASE COMMON STOCK,  THAT IN THE
AGGREGATE WOULD REPRESENT 20% OR MORE OF THE OUTSTANDING  SHARES OF COMMON STOCK
OF THE  COMPANY,  WHICH  APPROVAL IS  NECESSARY  IN ORDER TO MEET THE  CONTINUED
LISTING REQUIREMENTS FOR THE COMMON STOCK ON THE AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE

                  The following contains selected summary  information  relating
to certain  transactions  involving the Company's preferred stock. Copies of the
Securities  Purchase  Agreements,  Certificate of  Incorporation  of the Company
setting forth the rights and privileges of the preferred  stock, and the form of
warrant for each  series of  preferred  stock  (collectively,  the  "Transaction
Documents") are being filed with the SEC as exhibits to this Proxy Statement.

General

                  Since  December 31, 1997,  the Company has issued three series
of its five percent convertible preferred stock denominated Series A Convertible
Preferred Stock (the "Series A Preferred Stock"), Series B Convertible Preferred
Stock (the "Series B Preferred Stock") and Series C Convertible  Preferred Stock
(the "Series C Preferred Stock"). In addition,  the Company has agreed to issue,
pursuant to a mutually binding stock purchase agreement,  a fourth series of its
five  percent  convertible  preferred  stock  denominated  Series D  Convertible
Preferred  Stock (the  "Series D Preferred  Stock,"  with the Series A Preferred
Stock,  the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C Preferred  Stock,  the "5%
Preferred  Stock").  In connection with the issuance of the 5% Preferred  Stock,
the Company  has also  issued (or, in the case of the Series D Preferred  Stock,
agreed to issue)  warrants  to  purchase  its common  stock  (the "5%  Preferred
Warrants").

                  Each series of the 5% Preferred  Stock has similar  rights and
privileges,  and each  share of the 5%  Preferred  Stock  has a face  amount  of
$1,000.  The 5%  Preferred  Stock is  convertible  into the  number of shares of
common stock  determined  by dividing the face amount of the 5% Preferred  Stock
being converted by the applicable conversion price.

                  On December 31, 1997, the Company issued to RGC  International
Investors,  LDC  ("RGC"),  5,000  shares  of its  Series A  Preferred  Stock and
warrants  to purchase  150,000  shares of common  stock at an exercise  price of
$7.95 per share (the "Series A Warrants")  for an  aggregate  purchase  price of
$5,000,000.  As of the Record  Date,  there were no shares of Series A Preferred
Stock outstanding.

                  On May 29,  1998,  the  Company  issued  to RGC and  Shoreline
Associates I, LLC ("Shoreline"),  9,000 and 1,000 shares,  respectively,  of its
Series B Preferred  Stock and  warrants to purchase  180,000 and 20,000  shares,
respectively,  of common  stock  (the  "Series B  Warrants"),  for an  aggregate
purchase price of  $10,000,000.  The Series B Warrants have an exercise price of
$13.75 per share. Prior to February 28, 1999, the Conversion Price of the Series
B Preferred Stock (the "Series B Conversion Price") is $13.20.  Thereafter,  the
Series B Conversion  Price will be the lower of $13.20 (subject to an escalation
provision  pending  certain market  conditions  around such date) and a five day
average market price within a 20-day trading period prior to conversion, subject
to adjustment upon certain  conditions.  As of the Record Date, 10,125 shares of
Series B  Preferred  Stock  were  outstanding  as a  result  of the  payment  of
additional shares of Series B Preferred Stock as dividends.

                  On August 31, 1998,  the Company issued to RGC 7,500 shares of
its Series C Preferred  Stock and warrants to purchase  93,750  shares of common
stock at an exercise  price of $9.375 per share (the "Series C Warrants") for an
aggregate  purchase price of  $7,500,000.  Prior to May 31, 1999, the conversion
price of the Series C  Preferred  Stock  (the  "Series C  Conversion  Price") is
$9.00.  Thereafter,  the  Series C  Conversion  Price will be the lower of $9.00
(subject to an escalation  provision  pending certain market  conditions  around
such date) and a five day average  market price within a 30-day  trading  period
prior to conversion,  subject to adjustment upon certain  conditions.  As of the
Record Date,  7,531.25 shares of Series C Preferred Stock were  outstanding as a
result of payment of additional shares of Series C Preferred Stock as dividends.

                  Also on August 31,  1998,  the  Company  entered  into a stock
purchase  agreement whereby the Company agreed,  subject to certain  conditions,
including the stockholder approval being solicited hereby, to issue to RGC 7,500
shares of its Series D Preferred Stock and warrants to purchase 93,750 shares of
common  stock (the  "Series D  Warrants")  for an  aggregate  purchase  price of
$7,500,000.  The conversion price of the Series D Preferred Stock (the "Series D
Conversion  Price")  will  initially  be a price  equal  to 120% of the  average
closing  bid price of the  common  stock on the five days  prior to the date the
Series D Preferred Stock is issued (the "Initial Series D Conversion Price"). On
the ninth month anniversary of such issuance, the Series D Conversion Price will
be the lower of the Initial Series D Conversion  Price (subject to an escalation
provision  pending certain market conditions around such anniversary) and a five
day average  market price within a 30-day  trading  period prior to  conversion,
subject to  adjustment  upon certain  conditions.  The Series D Warrants will be
exercisable at 125% of average closing bid price of the common stock on the five
days prior to the date the Series D  Preferred  Stock is  issued.  Assuming  the
Series D Preferred  Stock was issued as of the December  11,  1998,  the Initial
Series D  Conversion  Price  would be $17.61,  and the 7,500  shares of Series D
Preferred  Stock would  convert  into  425,894  shares of common  stock,  which,
together with the common stock underlying the Series D Warrants, would represent
6.0% of the  outstanding  shares of  common  stock,  taking  into  account  such
conversion and the exercise of the Series D Warrants.

                  The  following  table  sets  forth  for each  holder of the 5%
Preferred  Stock,  and for all holders of the 5% Preferred Stock as a group, the
number of shares of the Company's common stock underlying the 5% Preferred Stock
and 5%  Preferred  Warrants  held by such  holder,  and  the  percentage  of the
Company's outstanding common stock that each represents as of December 11, 1998.
Percentage  ownership is based upon 8,631,087 shares of common stock outstanding
on December 11, 1998.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  Shares of common        Shares of common         Shares of                            
                                       stock                   stock              common stock                          
                                Underlying Series B     Underlying Series C       Underlying           Total Shares     
                                Preferred Stock(1)(2)   Preferred Stock(1)(2)     Warrants(2)       common stock(1)(2)  
                                      #          %            #          %          #          %         #         %    
- ------------------------------  ----------  ---------   ----------  ---------  ---------  --------  ---------  -------- 
<S>                                <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>      <C>          <C>   <C>           <C>   
RGC International                                                                                                       
  Investors, LDC(3)                690,340      7.4        836,805      8.8      423,750      4.7   2,314,241(5)  21.9  
Shoreline Associates I, LLC(4)      76,704        *              0        0       20,000        *      96,704      1.1  
Preferred Stockholders as a        767,044      8.2        836,805      8.8      443,750      4.9   2,410,945     22.6  
Group

<FN>                                                    
- --------------------
* Less than 1%
(1)      The number of shares into which holders of the Series B Preferred Stock
         and Series C Preferred  Stock can  convert is limited by the  Company's
         Certificate of Incorporation.  Some of these limitations will no longer
         be applicable in the event this Proposal Five is approved. Accordingly,
         the number of shares of common stock and percentage ownership set forth
         for the Series B Preferred Stock and Series C Preferred  Stock, and the
         total  shares of common  stock shown for RGC,  may exceed the number of
         shares of the Company's  common stock that the holders of the preferred
         stock beneficially own as of the date of this proxy statement.  In that
         regard,  the table may not  present  the  beneficial  ownership  of the
         holders of the preferred  stock in accordance with Rule 13d-3 under the
         Exchange   Act.   Please  see  "5%  Preferred   Stock--Limitations   on
         Conversion" for a more detailed discussion of these limitations.
(2)      The actual number of shares of common stock that the Company will issue
         upon  conversion of the Series B Preferred Stock and Series C Preferred
         Stock is  indeterminable  as of the date of this proxy statement and is
         subject to  adjustment.  The number of shares  underlying  the Series B
         Preferred  Stock and Series C  Preferred  Stock  would  increase if the
         conversion  price  decreased.  The  number  presented  is  based on the
         conversion  prices in effect as of December 11, 1998. See "5% Preferred
         Stock--Conversion   Prices;  Risk  Factors--Issuance  of  Common  Stock
         Pursuant to Existing  Obligations Will Result in Dilution to the Common
         Stockholders."
(3)      RGC owns  9,112.50  shares of  Series B  Preferred  Stock and  7,531.25
         shares of Series C  Preferred  Stock.  RGC is a party to an  investment
         management agreement with Rose Glen Capital Management, L.P., a limited
         partnership of which the general  partner is RGC General  Partner Corp.
         Messrs.  Wayne Bloch, Gary Kaminsky and Steve Katznelson own all of the
         outstanding  capital stock of RGC General  Partner Corp.,  are the sole
         officers and directors of RGC General  Partner Corp. and are parties to
         a shareholders'  agreement pursuant to which they collectively  control
         RGC General  Partner  Corp.  Through RGC General  Partner  Corp.,  such
         individuals control Rose Glen Capital Management, L.P. Such individuals
         disclaim  beneficial  ownership of the Company's  common stock owned by
         the Selling Stockholder.
(4)      Shoreline Associates I, LLC owns 1,012.50 shares of Series B  Preferred
         Stock.    Sean  Doherty, a  director  of  the  Company,  is an owner of
         Shoreline Associates I, LLC.
(5)      In addition to the common stock issuable upon conversion or exercise of
         the Series B Preferred Stock, Series C Preferred Stock and 5% Preferred
         Warrants, includes 363,364 shares of common stock.
</FN>
</TABLE>

                  In  the  event  all  shares  of the 5%  Preferred  Stock  were
converted  on  December  11,  1998 (and  assuming  the  Series D was  issued and
converted on the basis set forth  above),  the  outstanding  5% Preferred  Stock
would  convert  into an  aggregate  2,029,743  shares  of common  stock,  which,
together with the common stock underlying the 5% Preferred Warrants,  represents
22.3% of the outstanding shares of common stock on December 11, 1998 taking into
account such conversion.

                  In the event all such  shares of 5%  Preferred  Stock  were so
converted,  and taking into account the 712,964  shares of common stock  already
issued  upon  conversion  of the Series A  Preferred  Stock,  the  common  stock
issuable  under the 5%  Preferred  Stock and 5% Preferred  Warrants  would equal
47.0% of the 6,974,967 shares of common stock outstanding on the date the Series
A Preferred Stock was issued, December 31, 1997.

AMEX and NASDAQ Voting Requirements

                  The common stock is listed on the American Stock Exchange, the
market rules of which (the "AMEX  Rules")  require  stockholder  approval if the
Company  issues  common stock or securities  exercisable  for 20% or more of the
Company's  outstanding shares of common stock or voting power at a price that is
below the greater of book value or market value per share.  The Company  intends
to list its common stock on NASDAQ, subject to approval of Proposal Three, which
has a similar rule.

                  Currently, and at the time of their consummation,  none of the
series of 5% Preferred Stock, individually,  would result in the issuance of 20%
or more of the common stock.  However,  the floating  conversion price mechanism
contained in each series of the 5%  Preferred  Stock could result in 20% or more
of the  common  stock  being  issued on the  conversion  of any series of the 5%
Preferred Stock. In addition,  it is likely that the holders of the 5% Preferred
Stock would  convert their shares only if the  conversion  price were lower than
the market price. In addition,  the conversion of the 5% Preferred Stock, in the
aggregate,  would exceed 20% of the common stock. To comply with the AMEX Rules,
the terms of each series of 5% Preferred Stock prohibit conversions resulting in
more than 19.99% of the common stock being issued,  unless stockholder  approval
is obtained.

                  Therefore,  the  stockholders  must  vote  in  favor  of  this
Proposal  Five in order for the holders of the 5% Preferred  Stock to be able to
convert their shares of Preferred Stock without restriction.

                  The laws of the State of New York do not  require  Stockholder
Approval of the issuance of the 5% Preferred Stock,  the 5% Preferred  Warrants,
or the common stock underlying such securities.

Reason for the Transactions and Use of Proceeds

                  The 5% Preferred  Stock was issued to provide the Company with
capital to fund the Company's  expansion of ISP Channel,  Inc. Proceeds from the
sale of the 5% Preferred  Stock and the 5% Preferred  Warrants are being used to
fund the expenditures incurred in the continuing expansion of ISP Channel, Inc.,
particularly the ISP Channel service,  and for general corporate purposes.  Such
expenditures  include  procuring  the  equipment  necessary to deliver  Internet
services to  subscribers,  hiring  additional  personnel and sales and marketing
efforts.

The 5% Preferred Stock

                  The Series A Preferred  Stock has been  converted into 712,964
shares of common stock and is no longer  outstanding.  As such, the  description
below does not include the Series A Preferred Stock.

         Dividends.

                  The Holders of the 5% Preferred  Stock are entitled to receive
dividends at a rate of 5% per annum, payable quarterly, at the Company's option,
in cash or additional  shares of the  applicable  series of 5% Preferred  Stock.
Unpaid  dividends are cumulative.  Any accrued and unpaid  dividends are payable
only in the event of a liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company. In
addition,  the holders of the Series B Preferred  Stock are  entitled to receive
dividends of 10% per annum in the event they are unable to convert  their Series
B Preferred Stock because such  conversions  would result in greater than 19.99%
of the common  stock  being  issued  upon  conversion  of the  Series B,  unless
stockholder approval is obtained authorizing such conversions.

                  The  Company  has issued  100.78  shares of Series A Preferred
Stock,  125  shares of  Series B  Preferred  Stock and 31.25  shares of Series C
Preferred Stock as dividends.

     Limitations on Conversion

                  The Company's  Certificate of Incorporation defines the rights
and privileges of the 5% Preferred Stock. These rights and privileges follow the
5% Preferred Stock if it is  transferred,  but do not affect common stock issued
upon conversion.
Certain provisions of the Certificate of Incorporation are discussed below.

                  The Series A Preferred  Stock has been  converted in full, and
there are no shares outstanding.

                  A holder of the Series B Preferred  Stock  cannot  convert its
Series B  Preferred  Stock in the  event  such  conversion  would  result in its
beneficially  owning more than 4.99% of the Company's common stock, but they may
waive this  prohibition by providing us a notice of election to convert at least
61 days prior to such conversion.  Similarly, a holder of the Series C Preferred
Stock or Series D Preferred Stock cannot convert its Series C Preferred Stock or
Series  D  Preferred  Stock  in  the  event  such  conversion  would  result  in
beneficially owning more than 4.99% of the Company's common stock.  However, the
Series C  Preferred  Stock  does not  include  a waiver  provision  such as that
included  in the terms of the Series B  Preferred  Stock.  Notwithstanding  this
limitation,  the holders of the preferred stock cannot convert into an aggregate
of more than 19.99% of the  Company's  common stock  without the approval of the
Company's  common stock  shareholders,  which is being  sought by this  Proposal
Five, or the approval of the American Stock Exchange. In addition,  even if such
shareholder  approval  is  obtained,  the  Series B  Preferred  Stock,  Series C
Preferred  Stock and Series D Preferred Stock each cannot convert into more than
2,000,000 shares of common stock without our consent. In the event the 2,000,000
share cap for the Series C Preferred  Stock or the Series D  Preferred  Stock is
reached,  the Company must either honor  conversion  requests over the 2,000,000
share cap or redeem the remaining  Series C Preferred  Stock at its stated value
of $1,000 plus accrued and unpaid dividends.

                  The rules of the American Stock Exchange  require us to obtain
shareholder or AMEX approval to issue more than 20% of the Company's outstanding
common stock.  Shares of common stock issued upon conversion of the 5% Preferred
Stock or exercise of the 5% Preferred  Warrants  would count toward this 20%. As
such,  the AMEX rule  operates  as a further  restriction  on the ability of the
holders of the 5% Preferred Stock and the 5% Warrants to convert their preferred
stock or exercise their warrants.

                  The   2,000,000   share  cap  provides   common   shareholders
protection  against  dilution upon conversion of the 5% Preferred  Stock. In the
event the company obtains shareholder  approval for issuance of more than 19.99%
of its  common  stock  upon  conversion  of the 5%  Preferred  Stock,  the 4.99%
restriction does not protect common shareholders from dilution to the extent the
preferred  shareholders  convert  and  sell  shares  to keep at or  under  these
relevant  limits,  and the  2,000,000  share cap would  not  provide  protection
against  dilution  in the  event  the  company  decides  to  continue  to  honor
conversions  of the Series C Preferred  Stock or Series D Preferred  Stock after
the 2,000,000 share cap is reached.

     Conversion Prices

                  The stated value of each series of outstanding preferred stock
is $1,000 per share.  The actual number of shares of common stock  issuable upon
conversion of each series of Preferred Stock will be determined by the following
formula:

         (The aggregate stated value of the shares of preferred stock
                   thus being converted at $1,000 per share)

                                    divided by

           (The  applicable  conversion  price of the series of the
                          preferred stock being converted).

                  Prior to February 28, 1999, the conversion price of the Series
B Preferred Stock is equal to $13.20 per share. Thereafter, the conversion price
of the  Series B  Preferred  Stock is equal to the lower of $13.20 per share and
the lowest five day average  closing price of the common stock during the 20 day
trading period  immediately  prior to such  conversion.  The conversion price is
subject to adjustment as set forth in the Certificate of Incorporation.

                  Prior to May 31, 1999,  the  conversion  price of the Series C
Preferred Stock is equal to $9.00 per share. Thereafter, the conversion price of
the  Series C  Preferred  Stock is equal to the lower of $9.00 per share and the
lowest  five day average  closing  price of the common  stock  during the 30-day
trading period  immediately  prior to such  conversion.  The conversion price is
subject to adjustment as set forth in the Certificate of Incorporation.

                  Prior to the nine month  anniversary  of the  issuance  of the
Series D  Preferred  Stock,  the Series D  Conversion  Price will be the Initial
Series D Conversion Price. After such anniversary, the Series D Conversion Price
will be the  lower of the  Initial  Series D  Conversion  Price  (subject  to an
escalation  provision  pending certain market conditions around the anniversary)
and a five day average  market  price  within a 30-day  trading  period prior to
conversion, subject to adjustment upon certain conditions.

                  The following  table sets forth the number of shares of common
stock issuable upon conversion of the  outstanding  preferred stock assuming the
market price of the common  stock is 25%,  50%, 75% and 100% of the market price
of the common stock on December 11, 1998, which was $14.81 per share.

 Percent of Market
      Price          Series B Preferred Stock(1)     Series C Preferred Stock(2)
 -----------------   ---------------------------     ---------------------------
       25%                   2,000,000(3)                    2,035,472(4)
       50%                    1,366,396                       1,016,363
       75%                     911,341                         836,805
       100%                    767,045                         836,805
- ----------------
(1)      There are 10,125 shares of Series B Preferred  stock  outstanding as of
         December  11,  1998.  Each  share  has a stated  value of  $1,000.  The
         conversion  prices of the Series B Preferred Stock at 25%, 50%, 75% and
         100% of the market  price of $14.81 would be $3.70,  $7.41,  $11.11 and
         $13.20, respectively.
(2)      There are 7,531.25 shares of Series C Preferred Stock outstanding as of
         December  11,  1998.  Each  share  has a stated  value of  $1,000.  The
         conversion  prices of the Series C Preferred Stock at 25%, 50%, 75% and
         100% of the market  price of $14.81  would be $3.70,  $7.41,  $9.00 and
         $9.00, respectively.
(3)      The Series B Preferred Stock  cannot convert  into more  than 2,000,000
         shares of the common stock.
(4)      In the event the 2,000,000  share cap for the Series C Preferred  Stock
         is reached,  the Company must either honor conversion requests over the
         2,000,000 share cap or redeem the remaining Series C Preferred Stock at
         its stated value of $1,000 per share plus accrued but unpaid dividends.


         Voting Rights.

                  Holders of the 5% Preferred  Stock do not have voting  rights,
except for certain  protective  provisions  relating to changes in the rights of
holders of the 5%  Preferred  Stock or otherwise  required by law.  Consent of a
majority  in  interest  of each  effected  series of the 5%  Preferred  Stock is
required  prior to (i) changing the rights or  privileges  of such series;  (ii)
creating any new class or series of stock with preferences  above or on par with
those of such series;  (iii)  increasing the  authorized  number of such series;
(iv) any act which would result in a negative tax  consequence to the holders of
such series pursuant to Section 305 of the Internal Revenue Code.

                  In  addition,  a majority  vote of the holders of the Series B
Preferred  Stock,  Series C Preferred Stock, or Series D Preferred Stock, to the
extent  such  series is  effected,  is  required  to alter or change the rights,
preferences  or  privileges  of any capital stock of the Company so as to effect
adversely such series.  A majority vote by each of the Series C Preferred  Stock
and the  Series D  Preferred  Stock is  required  to change the par value of the
common stock.

         Priority.

                  Each series of the 5% Preferred  Stock is pari passu with each
other series of 5% Preferred  Stock,  and ranks senior to the common stock as to
dividends,   distributions   and   distribution  of  assets  upon   liquidation,
dissolution or winding up of the Company.

         Liquidation.

                  In the event of any liquidation,  dissolution or winding up of
the Company,  holders of the 5% Preferred  Stock will be entitled to be paid out
of  the  assets  of  the  Company  legally  available  for  distribution  to its
stockholders,  an  amount  equal to the  liquidation  value  per share of the 5%
Preferred  Stock,  but only  after and  subject  to the  payment  in full of all
amounts  required to be distributed to the holders of any other capital stock of
the Company  ranking in  liquidations  senior to such 5%  Preferred  Stock,  but
before any  payment  will be made to the  holders of the common  stock.  Certain
mergers or consolidations of the Company into or with another corporation or the
sale of all or  substantially  all of the assets of the Company may be deemed to
be a liquidation  of the Company  triggering the rights of the holders of the 5%
Preferred Stock.

         Redemption.

                  Each series of the 5% Preferred Stock is subject to redemption
upon certain  circumstances,  including the Company's (i) failure to convert the
5%  Preferred  Stock  when  required  and in the  proper  manner,  (ii) lapse of
effectiveness of the registration statement covering the common stock underlying
the 5% Preferred Stock, and (iii) suspension of the common stock from trading on
AMEX or New York Stock Exchange or NASDAQ.  In addition,  the Series B Preferred
Stock  is  subject  to  redemption  in  the  event  the  Company   breaches  the
registration  rights agreement pursuant to which the common stock underlying the
Series B Preferred Stock was registered  with the  Commission;  and the Series C
(and  Series D if  issued) is subject  to  redemption  in the event the  Company
breaches the stock purchase  agreement  pursuant to which the Series C Preferred
Stock was issued or the  registration  rights  agreement  pursuant  to which the
common stock  underlying the Series C Preferred  Stock was  registered  with the
Commission.

                  The  Company  will  have the  right  to  redeem  the  Series B
Preferred Stock on or after November 29, 1999 at a price equal to the greater of
120% of its face value or the market price multiplied by the number of shares of
common stock into which the Convertible Preferred can be converted.  The Company
will have the  right to  redeem  the  Series C  Preferred  Stock on or after the
earlier of (i) an  underwritten  public  offering or a Rule 144A offering in the
amount of at least  $10,000,000,  or (ii) February 29, 2000, at a price equal to
110% of its face value if such redemption is made prior to September 1, 1999 and
120% of the face value thereafter.  Once issued, the Company will have the right
to  redeem  the  Series D  Preferred  Stock on or after  the  earlier  of (i) an
underwritten  public  offering or a Rule 144A offering in the amount of at least
$10,000,000,  or (ii) the eighteen-month anniversary of the date of its issuance
at a price  equal to 110% of its face  value if such  redemption  is made in the
first 12 months that the Series D Preferred Stock is outstanding and 120% of the
face value thereafter.

         Maturity.

                  The Company,  in its sole  discretion,  must either  redeem or
convert the 5% Preferred Stock on the three year  anniversaries of issuance (the
"Maturity Date"). The Company's ability to convert the 5% Preferred Stock on the
Maturity  Date  is  subject  to  (i)  shareholder  approval  in the  event  such
conversion  (aggregated  with all previous  conversions  of 5% Preferred  Stock)
would result in the issuance of more than 19.99% of the outstanding common stock
as of December 31, 1997,  and (ii) the shares of common stock issuable upon such
conversion  being  authorized,  registered and eligible for trading over AMEX or
NASDAQ. In the event shareholder  approval is not obtained,  or the common stock
issuable upon such  conversion is not  authorized,  registered  and eligible for
trading over AMEX or NASDAQ, then the Company must redeem the 5% Preferred Stock
in cash. The Maturity Date of the Series B Preferred  Stock is May 29, 2001. The
Maturity Date of the Series C Preferred Stock is August 31, 2001.


The 5% Preferred Warrants

                  The 5% Preferred  Warrants have a term of four years,  and are
currently  exercisable.  The 5% Preferred Warrants contain certain anti-dilution
provisions  and permit  cashless  exercise.  The  Company  can call the Series B
Warrants and the Series C Warrants any time after the first year  anniversary of
their issuance,  but only in the event the market price of the common stock over
the twenty days prior to such call is 150% of the exercise price of the warrants
being called.  The Series A Warrants  have an exercise  price of $7.95 per share
and expire on December 31, 2001. The Series B Warrants have an exercise price of
$13.75 per share and  expire on May 28,  2002.  The  Series C  Warrants  have an
exercise  price of $9.375 per share and expire on August 31, 2002.  The exercise
price of the  Series D Warrants  will be 125% of the market  price of the common
stock on the date of issuance, and will expire four years after such issuance.

Certain Considerations

                  While the Board of  Directors  is of the  opinion  that the 5%
Preferred Stock  transactions,  and the resulting  issuance of common stock upon
conversion  or  exercise,  as  applicable,  of the  5%  Preferred  Stock  and 5%
Preferred Warrants,  are fair to, and are advisable and in the best interests of
the Company and its  stockholders,  stockholders  should  consider the following
possible  effect,  as well as the  other  information  contained  in this  Proxy
Statement,  in evaluating  this Proposal Five. In particular,  please review the
risk factors contained in the Risk Factor section above.

         Issuance of Senior Securities.

                  The  current  aggregate  liquidation   preference  of  the  5%
Preferred Stock,  without giving effect to any accrued but unpaid dividends,  is
$17,656,250 million ($25,5156,250 taking into account the Series D transaction).
In the event of the liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company, these
amounts  would be paid on a priority  over the holders of common  stock and will
reduce the amounts,  if any, which would  otherwise be payable to the holders of
common stock.

Absence of Appraisal Rights

                  Under New York and Delaware law,  objecting  stockholders will
have no appraisal,  dissenters'  or similar  rights  (i.e.,  the right to seek a
judicial determination of the "fair value" of the common stock and to compel the
Company to purchase  their common stock for cash in that amount) with respect to
matters  presented  at the Annual  Meeting or  otherwise  with respect to the 5%
Preferred  Stock  transactions,  nor will the  Company  voluntarily  accord such
rights to stockholders.

                  Therefore,  approval by the requisite  number of shares of the
matters presented at the Annual Meeting will bind all stockholders and objecting
stockholders  will be able to liquidate their common stock only by selling it in
the market.

Consequences if this Proposal Five is not Approved

                  If  stockholder  approval is not  obtained  for this  Proposal
Five,  the Company  will be required to make cash  payments to holders of the 5%
Preferred  Stock once such  holders  have  converted  into  19.99% of the common
stock. Cash payments would be equal to the number of shares of common stock that
could not be issued because of such restriction multiplied by the average market
price  of the  common  stock  on the five  days  prior to the date of  attempted
conversion.  In addition, the Company would not be able to complete the Series D
Preferred Stock financing, in which the Company would raise $7,500,000.

                  The following table sets forth the amount of such cash payment
assuming (i) the market price of such common stock is 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%, 125%,
150% and 175% of the market  price of the common  stock on  December  31,  1998,
which was $____ per share;  (ii) the  floating  rate  mechanism  of the Series B
Preferred  Stock  and  Series C  Preferred  Stock was in  effect;  and (iii) the
maximum  conversion price of the Series B Preferred Stock and Series C Preferred
Stock was not increased.


                              Cash Payment for Attempted Conversions 
                     -------------------------------------------------------
 Percentage of       Series B Preferred   Series C Preferred     Total Cash 
 Market Price(1)          Stock(2)              Stock(2)          Payments  
 ----------------    ------------------   ------------------    ------------
      25%            $                    $                     $           
      50%
      75%
     100%
     125%
     150%
     175%

(1)   The  conversion  prices of the Series B Preferred  Stock at 25%, 50%, 75%,
      100%,  125%,  150% and 175% of the market  price of $____  would be $____,
      $_____,  $____,  $____,  $____,  $____ and  $____,  respectively,  and the
      conversion prices for the Series C Preferred Stock at 100%, 125%, 150% and
      175% of the market price of $____ would be $____,  $_____,  $____,  $____,
      $____, $____ and $____, respectively.
(2)   The Series B  Preferred  Stock  cannot  convert  into more than  2,000,000
      shares  of  common  stock.  Accordingly,  cash  payments  on the  Series B
      Preferred  Stock  cease  once it has  converted  into,  or  received  cash
      payments in lieu of converting  into, an aggregate of 2,000,000  shares of
      common  stock.  The  Series C  Preferred  Stock has a similar  limitation.
      However,  once the 2,000,000 share limit is reached,  whether through cash
      payments  or actual  conversions,  the  Company  must  either  redeem  the
      remaining Series C Preferred Stock or continue to honor conversions.

                  Such cash  payments  and  inability  to complete  the Series D
Preferred  Stock  Financing  will  adversely  effect  the  Company's   financial
condition and ability to implement  its business  plan for ISP Channel,  Inc. In
addition, the Company will be required to raise funds elsewhere,  which could be
difficult in the event stockholder approval is not obtained. If the Company does
not receive  stockholder  approval,  there can be no assurance  that the Company
would be able to obtain adequate sources of additional capital.  "Risk Factors -
Possible Cash Payments to Holders of Preferred Stock."

Vote Required`

                  The affirmative vote on this Proposal Five by the holders of a
majority of shares of common  stock  present in person or by proxy at the Annual
Meeting is required to approve the issuance of the common stock  underlying  the
5%  Preferred  Stock and 5% Preferred  Warrants,  which in the  aggregate  would
represent 20% or more of the outstanding  shares of common stock, which approval
is necessary to meet the continued listing  requirements for the common stock on
the American  Stock  Exchange.  Such  approval  would permit the holders of such
preferred  stock to convert their  preferred stock into common stock without the
19.99%  limitation.  For purposes of  calculating  votes cast,  abstentions  are
included as votes cast while broker non-votes are not included as votes cast.

Recommendations of Board of Directors

                  The Board of Directors has reviewed and  considered  the terms
and  conditions of the 5% Preferred  Stock  transactions  and believes that such
transactions,  and the  resulting  issuance of common stock upon  conversion  or
exercise,  as applicable,  of the 5% Preferred Stock and 5% Preferred  Warrants,
are fair to, and are advisable and in the best interests of, the Company and its
stockholders.  The Board of Directors has unanimously  approved the 5% Preferred
Stock  transactions,  and the  issuance  of the common  stock  pursuant to their
conversion or exercise,  as  applicable,  and  unanimously  recommends  that the
stockholders  vote FOR approval of this Proposal Five.  The Company's  directors
and executive officers (who hold common stock representing  approximately  ____%
of the common  stock as of the Record Date) have  indicated  that they intend to
vote all shares of voting stock over which they exercise  voting power as of the
close of business on the Record Date in favor of approval of this Proposal Five.
The Board of Directors,  in recommending  stockholder  approval of this Proposal
Five, considered a number of factors,  including (a) the substantial increase in
the working capital of the Company that has resulted from such  transactions and
the prospect that, as a result of the increase in working capital resulting from
such  transactions,  the Company will be able to expand its operations,  improve
its access to capital  markets  and,  if  appropriate,  make  certain  strategic
acquisitions,   (b)  the  terms  of  the  Transaction  Documents,  and  (c)  the
alternatives  to the 5%  Preferred  Stock  transactions,  including  alternative
public or private financing.

                  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  BELIEVES  THAT THE 5% PREFERRED  STOCK
TRANSACTIONS,  AND THE  RESULTING  ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK UPON  CONVERSION  OR
EXERCISE,  AS APPLICABLE,  OF THE 5% PREFERRED STOCK AND 5% PREFERRED  WARRANTS,
ARE FAIR TO, AND ARE ADVISABLE AND IN THE BEST INTERESTS OF, THE COMPANY AND ITS
STOCKHOLDERS  AND HAS UNANIMOUSLY  APPROVED THE 5% PREFERRED STOCK  TRANSACTIONS
AND UNANIMOUSLY  RECOMMENDS THAT THE STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF PROPOSAL
FIVE.



<PAGE>


                                  PROPOSAL SIX

                SALE OF THE COMPANY'S WHOLLY-OWNED SUBSIDIARIES,
                                   KCI AND MTC

                  The  Company  has made a  strategic  decision  to focus on its
Internet  related  businesses.   As  such,  it  has  decided  to  sell  its  two
non-Internet  related  subsidiaries,  Kansas  Communications,  Inc.  ("KCI") and
Micrographic Technology Corporation ("MTC").

                  The Company has entered into formal negotiations with separate
buyers for each of KCI and MTC. The Company announced that it was seeking buyers
for KCI in April 1998 and has been accounting for it as a discontinued operation
since July 27,  1998.  KCI entered  into a  non-binding  letter of intent with a
potential  buyer,   Convergent   Communications   Services,   Inc.  ("Convergent
Communications")  on  November  9,  1998 (the  "Convergent  LOI").  The  Company
executed a term sheet  with  Global  Information  Distribution  GmbH  ("GID") on
November 5, 1998 (the "GID Term Sheet").

                  The  Company,  KCI  and  MTC are  currently  negotiating  with
Convergent Communications and GID to execute definitive agreements regarding the
sales, which may not come to fruition. However, the Company intends to sell both
KCI and MTC,  whether  on the terms  stated in the  Convergent  LOI and GID Term
Sheet or  otherwise,  and a Yes vote on this  Proposal  Six will  authorize  the
Company to dispose of both businesses on whatever terms and to whatever  parties
the  Board  of  Director  deems  appropriate.  Because  KCI and  MTC,  together,
constitute a  substantial  majority of the  historic  assets and revenues of the
Company, the sale of both KCI and MTC requires shareholder approval. The Company
reserves the right to sell either one without shareholder  approval,  and a "no"
vote does not prohibit the Company from selling KCI and MTC at such time as they
no  longer  constitute  a  substantial  majority  of the  Company's  assets  and
revenues.

                                   The Company

                  The  following  is a  brief  description  of  the  Company.  A
comprehensive  description  of the Company can be found in the Company's  Annual
Report on Form 10-K,  which is being  delivered with this Proxy Statement and is
incorporated by reference herein.

SoftNet Systems, Inc.

                  The Company's current principal executive office is located at
650 Townsend Street, San Francisco,  California 94103, (415) 365-2500. To reduce
its future  rent costs per square  foot,  the  Company has signed a lease at 650
Townsend Street, San Francisco, California, and it intends to move its principal
executive offices and ISP Channel, Inc. to this location in the first quarter of
1999.

     ISP Channel, Inc.

                  ISP   Channel,   Inc.   provides   residential   and  business
subscribers   access  to  the  Internet  over  the  existing  cable   television
infrastructure  at speeds up to 100 times  faster than 28.8  kilobits per second
dial-up  access.  ISP Channel's  core products and services  include  high-speed
Internet Access,  broadband  Internet access for residential,  small office/home
office and commercial  customers,  World Wide Web ("Web") site development,  Web
hosting  and  collocation,   on-line  commerce  applications,   virtual  private
networks,  IP telephony,  video conferencing and other collaborative  multimedia
applications using the Company's servers,  and local content,  including planned
on-line communities, Remote Local Area Networks and dial-up Internet access.

     Intelligent Communications, Inc.

                  The Company  has signed an  agreement  to acquire  Intelligent
Communications,  Inc.  ("Intellicom"),  the former  Xerox  Skyway  Network.  The
consummation  of the  acquisition  is  subject  to  approval  from  the  Federal
Communications   Commission.   Intellicom  offers  Internet  services  including
Internet access via two way satellite which uses a proprietary  VSAT (Very Small
Aperture  Terminal)  technology  and hardware  manufactured  by  Intellicom.  In
conjunction  with  its two  way  VSAT  Internet  connectivity,  Intellicom  also
provides a caching  service  designed to ease Internet  congestion and speed the
performance of delivering web traffic by up to 60%.

Kansas Communications, Inc.

                  KCI  provides  communication  solutions  through  the  design,
implementation,   maintenance   and   integration  of  voice,   data  and  video
communication  equipment and service.  KCI operates  throughout  the  Midwestern
United  States with  offices in Kansas City and the greater  metropolitan  area,
Columbia,  Missouri,  Wichita,  Kansas and Milwaukee,  Wisconsin.  The Company's
telecommunications  product offerings include third party manufactured telephone
systems and call processing  systems  (including call centers,  voice messaging,
interactive voice response ("IVR") and computer telephone  integration ("CTI")).
Additionally, the Company develops software for IVR and CTI applications,  sells
local and long distance  network  services,  provides  maintenance  services for
existing customers and provides cabling and data communications. KCI markets its
products and services  primarily to customers with 25 or more telephones located
in the Midwest.

                  KCI  generates  revenue  primarily  through  the sale of third
party vendor products through new installations of systems to either existing or
new  customers  and the  provisions of customers  with "moves,  adds,  changes,"
service and  maintenance  to their  existing  systems.  KCI purchases all of the
equipment and software  that it markets and installs  from third party  vendors.
The majority of the products  sold by the  division are  purchased  from Fujitsu
Business  Communication  Systems, Inc. and Executone Information Systems.  Other
parts and components necessary for installation and service are purchased from a
variety of sources  and,  the  Company  believes,  are  readily  available  from
alternative sources.

Micrographic Technology Corporation

                  MTC  designs,   develops,   and  manufactures   sophisticated,
automated  electronic  document  management and film-based imaging solutions for
customers with  large-scale,  complex,  document-intensive  requirements.  MTC's
hardware and software products are based on an industry  standard  client-server
architecture,  providing flexibility to connect to a wide variety of information
systems and produce  output to various  storage media,  including  optical disk,
magnetic  disk and tape,  CD-ROM,  and microfilm  and  microfiche,  spanning the
entire  document  lifecycle.  MTC  manufactures  a family of Computer  Output to
Microfilm ("COM") production systems, from which it has historically derived the
majority of its revenues. MTC's proprietary software captures information from a
variety of sources, then intelligently indexes and directs the data for storage,
distribution and retrieval.  MTC expects that its business will  increasingly be
focused on the distribution and retrieval of electronically captured information
over a variety of communications media, such as the Internet, LANs and wide area
networks  ("WANs").  To this end, MTC is pursuing a strategy of partnering  with
providers  of  features  or  elements   that  enhance  MTC's   electronic   data
distribution solutions.

                           Proposed Sales Transactions

                  The  Company  has  decided to sell KCI and MTC to focus on its
Internet related  businesses.  While the Company has entered into the Convergent
LOI and GID Term Sheet, these transactions may not be consummated.  In the event
either of the transactions is not consummated, the Company will continue to seek
to  divest  itself  of KCI  and  MTC.  There  can be no  assurance  that in such
instance, the Company will be able to find another buyer or that it will be able
to sell KCI or MTC on terms similar to the  transactions  described  herein.  By
voting for this Proposal Six, shareholders are consenting to the sale of KCI and
MTC on any terms and to any parties  deemed  advisable by the Board of Directors
of the Company.

                  The terms of each proposed sale are the result of  arms-length
negotiations between the Company and each respective purchaser.

Background

     Kansas Communications Inc.

                  In April  1998,  the Company  announced  that it was seeking a
buyer for KCI.

                  In July 1998,  the Board of Directors of the Company  formally
adopted  a  resolution  to  account  for KCI as a  discontinued  operation,  and
restated its financial statements accordingly.

                  In July 1998, the Company approached Convergent Communications
through a broker.  From August through  October 1998, the Company and Convergent
Communications  met and discussed the possible  acquisition of KCI by Convergent
Communications.

                  On October  6, 1998,  the Board of  Directors  of the  Company
authorized  the  officers  to enter  into a letter  of  intent  with  Convergent
Communications upon the fulfillment of certain conditions.

                  On November 9, 1998 the Company and Convergent  Communications
signed  a  non-binding  letter  of  intent  for the  sale  of KCI to  Convergent
Communications,  the terms of which were  ratified by the Board of  Directors on
November 13, 1998.

     Micrographic Technology Corporation

                  In October 1998, the Company approached GID with a proposal to
sell MTC to GID.  During October 1998 and November 1998, the Company and GID met
and discussed the possible acquisition of MTC by GID.

                  On October  6, 1998,  the Board of  Directors  of the  Company
authorized  the  officers  to enter  into a letter of  intent  with GID upon the
fulfillment of certain conditions.

                  On November  5, 1998,  the Company and GID signed a term sheet
for the sale of MTC to GID,  which was ratified by the Board of Directors of the
Company on November 13, 1998.

Terms of the Convergent LOI

                  The   Company   has   agreed   to  sell   KCI  to   Convergent
Communications for an aggregate purchase price of up to $6,600,000. The purchase
price is to be paid as follows:

                  1. Convergent Communications paid the Company $100,000 in cash
upon execution of the letter of intent;

                  2. Convergent Communications would pay the Company $500,000 in
cash on the Closing of the purchase and sale of the Assets,  as would be defined
in the Purchase Agreement;

                  3. Convergent Communications would obtain a financing facility
in the amount of $2,900,000  of which the proceeds  thereof would be paid to the
Company on the Closing Date;

                  4. On the Closing Date, Convergent  Communications would issue
to the Company  60,000  shares of  Convergent  Communications'  parent  company,
Convergent Communications, Inc., a Colorado corporation ("Parent"), no par value
common stock ("Convergent  Stock"), with an agreed value of $600,000 ($10.00 per
share);

                  5. On the Closing Date, Convergent  Communications would issue
the Company a promissory  note  ("Purchaser  Note") in the amount of $1,000,000.
The  Purchaser  Note would be payable  on the date which is twelve  (12)  months
following  the Closing Date and would bear simple  interest at the rate of eight
percent (8%) per annum;

                  6. On the Closing Date, Convergent  Communications would issue
the Company a promissory note  ("Contingent  Note") in an amount up to a maximum
of $1,500,000.  The Contingent Note would be payable on the date which is twelve
(12) months  following the Closing Date,  would bear simple interest at the rate
of eight  percent  (8%) per annum and would be subject to reduction in the event
KCI's net  working  capital and assets are less than  $2,200,000  on the Closing
Date. The Company would have the option to accelerate  payment of the Contingent
Note upon thirty (30) days written  notice to Convergent  Communications  in the
event that Parent  completes  an equity or debt  financing  with net proceeds in
excess of $25,000,000.

Terms of the GID Term Sheet

                  The  Company  has  agreed to sell MTC to GID for an  aggregate
purchase price of $5,125,000. The purchase price is to be paid as follows:

                  1. GID paid the Company $100,000 as a  non-refundable  deposit
upon acceptance of the GID Term Sheet;

                  2. GID shall pay to the Company at the Closing US$5,025,000 in
readily available funds.

Description of Convergent Communications Services, Inc.

                  Convergent  Communications  is a wholly  owned  subsidiary  of
Convergent Communications,  Inc. ("Parent"). Its principal executive offices are
located at 67 Inverness Drive East, Suite 110, Englewood,  Colorado 80112, (303)
749-3000. Its Internet Website address is www.converg.com.

                  Convergent  Communications,  an  Enterprise  Network  Carrier,
delivers comprehensive,  single-source  communications solutions that capitalize
on  today's  converging  voice,  data and  multimedia  technologies.  Convergent
Communication's   business   strategy  is   centered  on  an   interdisciplinary
communications  skill set, a commitment to customer care, and the ability to own
and manage all elements of Convergent  Communications'  client's  communications
network with maximum  quality and  reliability.  As a provider of telephone  and
data networking systems, Convergent Communications' offerings include:

         o Local and Wide Area Data Networking
         o Data Products and Systems
         o Data Transport Services
         o Network Management
         o Internet & Intranet Services
         o Telephone  Systems 
         o Long-distance  and Local Telephone  Services 
         o Video Conferencing
         o Enterprise Network Services

                  Enterprise     Network    Services     ("ENS"),     Convergent
Communications' flagship service offering, begins with integrated data and voice
networking within its customers' premises, where Convergent  Communications owns
and  is   responsible   for  the  ongoing   integrity  and  management  of  that
communication network. This unique approach also includes responsibility for the
aggregation and management of our customers' communications  connectivity to the
rest of the world.  In short,  ENS allows  customers  to focus on core  business
competencies instead of the underlying technology supporting those competencies.

                         Company's Reason for the Sales

                  The Company  considered  many  factors in deciding to sell KCI
and MTC. The primary reasons for selling the two divisions are:

                  1. Additional  Funds for the Company to Fuel the Growth of ISP
Channel,  Inc. The Company  expects to incur  substantial  losses and experience
substantial negative cash flows as it expands ISP Channel,  Inc. The Company has
sustained  substantial  losses over the last five fiscal  years.  For the fiscal
year ended September 30, 1998, the Company had a net loss of $___ million and an
accumulated stockholders' deficit of approximately $___ million.

                  The sale price of KCI is approximately $6.6 million.  The sale
price of MTC is approximately  $5.125 million. The proceeds from the sale of KCI
and MTC will be used to partially  fund the continued  expansion of the Internet
Services.

                  2. Limited   Growth  Potential  of MTC.  MTC  faces  increased
competition  from emerging  technologies  that are perceived to offer advantages
over  the  traditional  methods  of  managing  records  and  documents  that MTC
currently  uses.  The Board of Directors  believes that the current  product and
services  offerings of MTC have  limited  growth  potential.  While the Board of
Directors   believes  that  MTC  can  adapt  and  thrive  in  this  increasingly
competitive  environment,  the Board of  Directors  has  decided to focus on the
growth possibilities of ISP Channel, Inc.


                  3. Management Focus. ISP Channel, Inc. is a growing company in
a  very  competitive  and  growing  industry.  As  such,  implementation  of the
Company's business plan for ISP Channel, Inc. will require substantial attention
from the Board of  Directors  and  substantially  all of the  management  of the
Company.



<PAGE>


                  Possible Disadvantages of Selling KCI and MTC

                  Although  management of the Company recommends approval of the
sale,  management  recognizes that there may be certain  uncertainties  or other
disadvantages  associated  with a sale of KCI and MTC.  In  addition to the risk
factors  beginning on page ___ of the  accompanying  Annual Report on Form 10-K,
management also considered the following uncertainties and disadvantages:

                  1.  Limited  Operating  History  of  ISP  Channel,   Inc.  The
Company's current strategy for growth is to focus on substantially expanding the
business of ISP Channel,  Inc., which was acquired in June 1996. The Company has
very limited operating history and experience in the Internet services business,
and the  successful  expansion of the Company's  ISP Channel,  Inc. will require
strategies and operations that are different from those historically employed by
the Company.  There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to develop
or maintain  strategies and business  operations  that are necessary to increase
the revenues of the Company's  ISP Channel,  Inc.  sufficiently  to enable it to
achieve positive cash flow and profitability.

                  2. Failure to Consummate Sale of Divisions.  If the Company is
unable to consummate a sale of KCI or MTC on terms it believes are satisfactory,
it will not  obtain  the  proceeds  anticipated  from  such  sales,  which  will
correspondingly  diminish the capital  available to the Company to implement its
business plan for the Internet Service Division.  In the absence of such a sale,
management's  attention could be substantially  diverted to operate or otherwise
dispose of these subsidiaries.  If a sale of KCI or MTC is delayed,  their value
could be diminished.  Moreover,  KCI and MTC could incur losses and operate on a
cash flow negative basis in the future.

                  3.  Disposal  of  the  Source  of  Substantially  All  of  the
Company's Revenues.  To date,  virtually all of the Company's revenues have been
derived from KCI and MTC. The sale of either,  or both, of these divisions would
have  an  adverse  short-term  effect  on  the  Company's  financial  condition,
including cash flow from operations.

              Potential Effects of the Sales Upon the Stockholders

                  The Company  intends to sell both KCI and MTC for cash or cash
equivalents.  The Company intends to use the proceeds therefrom to implement its
business  plan  for ISP  Channel,  Inc.  The  Company  does not plan to make any
distribution to shareholders as a result of the sale of KCI. The shareholders of
the Company will  continue to hold the same common stock of the Company  without
change.

                 
                         Effect of Sales of MTC and KCI
                           And Intellicom Acquisition

                  For a discussion of the  anticipated  financial  effect of the
proposed acquisition of Intellicom and the proposed sales of MTC and KCI, please
refer to the  Management's  Discussion  and Analysis of Financial  Condition and
Results of Operations set forth in the Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended  September  30, 1998,  which is being  delivered  with this Proxy
Statement and is incorporated by reference herein.


                    Accounting and Tax Treatment of the Sales

Accounting Treatment of the Sales

                  [The  Company does not expect to sustain a loss on the sale of
KCI and MTC.]  Additionally,  the  Company  has  treated  KCI as a  discontinued
operation  since  July 27,  1998.  The sales  [will each be treated as a sale of
assets for financial reporting purposes],  each to be reflected in the financial
statements of the Company in the quarter it is consummated.

Federal Income Tax Consequences of the Sales

                  [The  sale of KCI and the  sale of MTC will be  reported  as a
sale of assets]  for  federal  income tax  purposes  in the fiscal  year  ending
September  30,  1999.  However,  the  federal  income  tax  effect  of the  sale
transaction cannot be estimated at this time.


                    Federal and State Regulatory Requirements

                  At this  time,  the  Company  is not  required  to obtain  the
approval of any state or federal regulatory  agencies in order to consummate the
sale of KCI or MTC.  However,  there can be no assurances  that the Company will
not be required to obtain such  approvals in the future;  nor, if such approvals
are necessary, that the Company will be able to obtain such approvals.


                              Principal Accountants

                  PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP,  independent  auditors  for  the
Company for the fiscal year ending  September  30,  1998,  is (i) expected to be
present at the Shareholders'  Meeting,  (ii) will have the opportunity to make a
statement  if they so desire,  and (iii) are  expected to be available to answer
appropriate questions.

                                  VOTE REQUIRED

                  The affirmative  vote of at least  two-thirds of the Company's
outstanding common stock is required to approve this Proposal Six. Such approval
will authorize the Board to sell KCI and MTC on the terms described herein or on
such other terms and to such other  parties as the Board of Directors of SoftNet
deems  advisable.  In the event this Proposal Six is not  approved,  the Company
reserves  the right to sell  either KCI or MTC without  shareholder  approval as
well as the  right to sell both MTC and KCI at such time that MTC and KCI do not
represent a substantial majority of the assets and revenues of the Company.


                    RECOMMENDATION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                  THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  DEEMS  PROPOSAL SIX TO BE IN THE BEST
INTERESTS  OF THE  COMPANY  AND ITS  STOCKHOLDERS  AND  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR"
APPROVAL THEREOF.  UNLESS AUTHORITY TO DO SO IS WITHHELD, THE PERSON(S) NAMED IN
EACH PROXY WILL VOTE THE SHARES  REPRESENTED  THEREBY "FOR" THE APPROVAL TO SELl
KCI and MTC.





<PAGE>


                                 PROPOSAL SEVEN

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

                  At the Annual  Meeting,  seven  directors are to be elected to
hold  office  until the next  annual  meeting  of  shareholders  or until  their
successors  are elected and  qualified.  The Board of  Directors  of the Company
currently consists of seven members.

                  It is intended that the proxies  (except proxies marked to the
contrary) will be voted for the nominees  listed below,  all of whom are members
of the present Board of Directors.  It is expected that the nominees will serve,
but if any nominee declines or is unable to serve for any unforeseen  cause, the
proxies  will be voted to fill any  vacancy so arising  in  accordance  with the
discretionary authority of the persons named in the proxies. Under the Bylaws of
the Company,  persons must be  nominated at least  forty-five  days prior to the
meeting;  accordingly,  no  additional  persons may be  nominated  at the Annual
Meeting.

Nominees

                  The following table set forth certain  information  concerning
the nominees, all of whom are members of the present Board of Directors:

        Name of Nominee           Age    Position
- -----------------------------     ---    ---------------------------------------
Ronald I. Simon..............      59    Chairman of the Board
Dr. Lawrence B. Brilliant....      54    Vice Chairman of the Board, President
                                         and Chief Executive Officer
Ian B. Aaron.................      38    Director, Vice President, President
                                         of ISP Channel, Inc.
Edward A. Bennett............      51    Director
Sean P. Doherty..............      40    Director
John G. Hamm.................      59    Director
Robert C. Harris, Jr.........      52    Director


                  Ronald I. Simon has served as a member of  SoftNet's  Board of
Directors  since September 1995 and Chairman of the Board since August 1997. Mr.
Simon has served as Vice President and Chief Financial  Officer of Western Water
Company,  a developer and marketer of water supplies,  since May 1997. Mr. Simon
has also served as Director of Westcorp Investments,  a wholly-owned  subsidiary
of Westcorp,  Inc., a holding company for Western Financial Bank and as Director
of Citadel  Corporation,  a real  estate  investment  company,  since  1995.  In
addition,  Mr. Simon served as Chairman of Sonant  Corporation,  an  interactive
voice response equipment company, from 1993 to 1997.

                  Dr.  Lawrence B. Brilliant has served as a member of SoftNet's
Board of Directors  since  January  1998 and has served as Vice  Chairman of the
Board,  President and Chief Executive Officer of SoftNet since April 1998. Prior
to joining  SoftNet,  Dr.  Brilliant  served as  President  and Chief  Executive
Officer of Brilliant Color Cards, a telephone  debit/calling card company,  from
1989 to 1998. Dr. Brilliant is a founder of MultiVox Communications,  a switched
telephone  reseller.  Dr.  Brilliant  is  also a  founder  of the  International
Telecard  Association  and has served as Director  and Chairman  Emeritus  since
1992.  Dr.  Brilliant  was also a founder of The Well in 1984 when he was CEO of
Network  Technologies,  Inc.  Dr.  Brilliant  has also been a  professor  at the
University  of  Michigan  and has  served as a medical  officer  with the United
Nations

                  Ian B.  Aaron has  served as a member  of  SoftNet's  Board of
Directors since October 1994. In addition,  Mr. Aaron has served as President of
ISP Channel  since June 1996 and as Vice  President  of SoftNet  since  December
1997.  Prior to joining  SoftNet,  Mr. Aaron served as President of  Communicate
Direct,  Inc., a  telecommunications  company,  from 1988 to October 1994 and as
Director  of  Marketing,   Sales  and  Product   Development   at  GTE  Business
Communications.

                  Edward A. Bennett has served as a member of SoftNet's Board of
Directors  since  January  1998.  Mr.  Bennett has served as President and Chief
Executive     Officer    of    Bennett     Media     Collaborative,     a    new
media/Internet/technology consulting company, since June 1997, Director and Vice
Chairman of methodfive  LLC, an Internet  services  company,  since June 1997 as
Director of Spinner  Networks,  an Internet music service,  since December 1997,
and as Director of MY-CD, an Internet-based  custom CD marketing company,  since
May 1998.  Mr. Bennett also served as President and Chief  Executive  Officer of
Prodigy Ventures, an Internet/technology  investment firm from June 1996 to June
1997  and  as  President  and  Chief  Executive   Officer  of  Prodigy  Services
Corporation,  an Internet services company from 1995 to June 1996.  Furthermore,
Mr. Bennett served as President and Chief Executive  Officer of VH-1 Network,  a
television programming company, from 1989 to 1994.

                  Sean P. Doherty has served as a member of  SoftNet's  Board of
Directors since May 1998. Mr. Doherty is currently an owner and Managing Partner
of Shoreline  Associates  I, LLC  ("Shoreline  Associates"),  a private  Silicon
Valley  investment firm.  Shoreline  Associates  invests in management  buyouts,
special equity and venture capital for companies in the  telecommunications  and
broadcasting  industries.  Shoreline  Associates is unaffiliated  with Shoreline
Pacific  Institutional  Finance, the entity that arranged the 5% Preferred Stock
offerings.  From 1995 to 1997, Mr. Doherty was a co-founder of @Home, serving as
@Home's  Chief  Operating   Officer  and  later  as  the  President  of  @Home's
business-to-business  services  division,  @Work. Mr. Doherty was previously the
founder and Chief Executive  Officer of TEAM Software,  a developer of workgroup
applications  for the  Internet and  corporate  networks.  Mr.  Doherty has also
served as  President  of  TradeNet,  Inc.,  an on-line  transaction  network for
commodities traders.

                  John G.  Hamm has  served as a member  of  SoftNet's  Board of
Directors  since 1985.  Mr. Hamm has served as Executive Vice President of ARTRA
Group  Incorporated,  a flexible  packaging  company,  since 1988. Mr. Hamm also
served as Director of Ozite  Corporation,  a textiles,  hose and tubing company,
from 1984 to 1994 and as Vice  President  of Finance of Ozite  Corporation  from
1990 to 1994.  In addition,  Mr. Hamm served as Director of Plastic  Specialties
and  Technologies,  Inc.,  a  textiles,  hose and tubing  company,  from 1993 to
January 1996.

                  Robert C.  Harris,  Jr.  has  served as a member of  SoftNet's
Board of Directors  since May 1998.  Mr. Harris has served as a Senior  Managing
Director and Head of  Investment  Banking in the San  Francisco  office of Bear,
Stearns & Co. Inc.  since  November  1997. Mr. Harris also serves as Director of
MDSI Mobile Data Solutions, Inc., N2K, Inc., and Xoom.com. Prior to joining Bear
Stearns,  Mr.  Harris was a  co-founder  and a Managing  Director  of  Unterberg
Harris, a registered  broker-dealer  and investment  advisory firm. From 1984 to
1989, Mr. Harris was a General Partner, Managing Director, and Director of Alex.
Brown & Sons.

Board Meetings and Committees

                  The Board of  Directors  held 15  meetings  and took action by
written  consent  eight times during the fiscal year ended  September  30, 1998.
Each  director  attended at least 75% of the  meetings of the Board of Directors
and the Committees on which he served.

                  The Board of  Directors  has three  standing  committees:  the
Audit  Committee,  the  Compensation/Stock  Option  Committee  and an  Executive
Committee.  There  is  no  nominating  committee  or  committee  performing  the
functions of such committee.

                  The Audit Committee,  currently  consisting of Messrs.  Simon,
Hamm and Bennett,  had one meeting in fiscal 1998,  which was attended by all of
the  then  directors  of the  Committee.  The  Audit  Committee  meets  with the
Company's  financial  management  and its  independent  accountants  and reviews
internal control  conditions,  audit plans and results,  and financial reporting
procedures.

                  The Compensation/Stock Option Committee,  currently consisting
of Messrs. Simon, Harris and Doherty, held informal meetings in fiscal 1998. The
Compensation/Stock   Option   Committee   review  and  approves  the   Company's
compensation  arrangements  for key employees and administers the Company's 1995
Long Term  Incentive  Plan and, if  Proposal  Four is  approved,  the 1998 Stock
Incentive Plan.

                  The Executive Committee, currently consisting of Dr. Brilliant
and Mr. Simon,  held informal  meetings in fiscal 1998. The Executive  Committee
has all the  authority  of the Board,  except  with  respect to items  requiring
shareholder approval or submission, the filling of Board or Committee vacancies,
fixing  director  compensation,  amending  or  adopting  Bylaws or  amending  or
appealing Board resolutions that are not amenable or repealable.


Director Compensation

                  Members of the Board who are not  employees  of the Company or
of a subsidiary of the Company are each paid a monthly retainer fee of $1,000 in
connection with their attendance and participation at Board meetings.  Mr. Simon
is paid an  additional  $1,500 per month for his  services  as  Chairman  of the
Board. In addition, Board members are reimbursed for certain reasonable expenses
incurred in attending Board or committee meetings.  Upon joining the Board, each
non-employee  Board member also  receives a purchase  option grant for shares of
common stock under the 1998 Plan.

                  Dr.  Brilliant  and Mr.  Aaron each receive  compensation  for
their  services as executive  officers of the Company.  A  description  of these
compensation  arrangements are set forth under "Executive Compensation - Certain
Agreements."

                  In addition,  subject to approval of Proposal  Four,  existing
non-employee  directors will each receive  options to purchase  20,000 shares of
common stock at the Annual Stockholders Meeting held 2001 and additional options
to purchase  20,000  shares of common  stock at each third  Annual  Stockholders
Meeting  thereafter  if such person  continues to be a director.  See  "Proposal
Four--Automatic Option Grant Program."

                  A description of other transactions  between directors and the
Company is set forth below in "Certain Relationships and Related Transactions."


Voting

                  The Company's  charter  provides for cumulative  voting in the
election  of  directors.  Cumulative  voting  allows a  stockholder  to give one
candidate  a number of votes  equal to the  number of  directors  to be  elected
multiplied by the number of shares of common stock held by such shareholder,  or
may distribute such votes among as many  candidates as the shareholder  chooses.
In this  way,  a  shareholder  with a  sufficient  minority  stake  can  elect a
director.  Election  of the  named  nominees  requires  approval  by at  least a
majority  of the  shares of common  stock  present  in person or by proxy at the
Annual Meeting.


                THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  THAT THE  STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE
"FOR" THE ELECTION OF THE NAMED NOMINEES.



<PAGE>


                   BENEFICIAL SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT
                          AND CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS

The  following  table  sets  forth  certain  information  known  to the  Company
regarding  beneficial  ownership  of the common stock as of December 11, 1998 by
(i) each  person  known by the Company to be the  beneficial  owner of more than
five percent of the  outstanding  shares of the common stock,  (ii) each current
director of the Company, (iii) the Chief Executive Officer and each of the other
executive  officers of the Company and (iv) all executive officers and directors
of the  Company as a group.  All shares are subject to the named  person's  sole
voting and investment power except where otherwise indicated.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                          Number of Shares             Percentage of
                                                           of Common Stock          Outstanding Shares
                        Name of Beneficial Owner       Beneficially Owned (1)     Beneficially Owned (1)
                                                                                            (2)
- -------------- -------------------------------------- -------------------------- --------------------------
<S>            <C>                                    <C>                            <C>
Executive      Ronald I. Simon (3)                               8,500                         *
Officers and   Lawrence B. Brilliant (4)                        67,500                         *
Directors:     Garrett J. Girvan                                10,000                         *
               Douglas S. Sinclair                                 ---                       ---
               Steven M. Harris                                  4,000                         *
               Ian B. Aaron (5)                                297,262                      3.4%
               Edward A. Bennett (6)                            73,500                         *
               Sean P. Doherty (7)                              40,000                         *
               John G. Hamm (8)                                 46,930                         *
               Robert C. Harris, Jr.                               ---                       ---
                                                       ---------------           ---------------
               As a Group (ten):                               547,693                      5.9%


5% Owners:     White Rock Capital, Inc. (9)                    869,300                     10.1%
               R. C. W. Mauran (10)                            704,128                      7.8%
               RGC International Investors, LDC (11)         2,314,259                     21.9%
                                                         -------------           ---------------
                 Subtotal:                                   3,887,687                     35.3%

<FN>
- --------------
*        Less than 1%
(1)      Beneficial  ownership is determined in accordance with the rules of the
         Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,  except with respect to RGC (see
         footnote  11  below).  Shares of common  stock  which  are  issued  and
         outstanding are deemed to be  beneficially  owned by any person who has
         or shares  voting or  investment  power with  respect  to such  shares.
         Shares of common stock which are issuable  upon  exercise of options or
         warrants are deemed to be issued and outstanding and beneficially owned
         by any person who has or shares  voting or  investment  power over such
         shares only if the options or  warrants  in  question  are  exercisable
         within  60 days of  December  11,  1998  (after  giving  effect  to any
         acceleration  provisions which are triggered solely by the Merger) and,
         in  any  event,  solely  for  purposes  of  calculating  that  person's
         percentage ownership of SoftNet's common stock (and not for purposes of
         calculating the percentage ownership of any other person).
(2)      The number of shares of common stock deemed outstanding and used in the
         denominator for determining percentage ownership for each person equals
         (i)  8,631,087  shares of common stock  outstanding  as of December 11,
         1998 plus (ii) such  number of shares of common  stock as are  issuable
         pursuant to options,  warrants or  Preferred  Stock held by that person
         (and  excluding  options held by other  persons) which may be exercised
         within 60 days of December 11, 1998.
(3)      Includes 2,500 shares issuable pursuant to options  exercisable  within
         60 days of December 11, 1998.
(4)      Includes 57,500 shares issuable pursuant to options  exercisable within
         60 days of December 11, 1998.
(5)      Includes 150,833 shares issuable pursuant to options exercisable within
         60 days of December 11, 1998.
(6)      Includes 57,500 shares issuable pursuant to options  exercisable within
         60 days of December 11, 1998.
(7)      Includes  20,000 shares  issuable upon exercise of warrants held in the
         name of Shoreline  Associates I, LLC, of which Mr. Doherty is an owner,
         which are exercisable within 60 days of December 11, 1998.
(8)      Consists  of  44,430  shares  held  jointly  with Mr.  Hamm's  wife and
         includes 2,500 shares issuable pursuant to options  exercisable  within
         60 days of December 11, 1998.
(9)      Consists of shares of common stock (i) held for the accounts of certain
         institutional clients of White Rock Capital Management, L.P., (ii) held
         by White  Rock  Capital  Partners,  L.P.  and (iii)  held by White Rock
         Capital Management, L.P.
(10)     Includes  179,640  shares  issuable upon  conversion of 9%  Convertible
         Subordinated Debentures,  175,000 shares issuable upon conversion of 5%
         Convertible  Subordinated  Debentures  and 81,481 shares  issuable upon
         conversion of 6% Convertible  Subordinated Secured Debentures issued by
         Micrographic Technology Corporation.  Shares listed reflect shares held
         by Eurocredit Investments, Ltd., a Maltese company that is wholly-owned
         by Mr. Mauran.
(11)     As of December 11, 1998,  RGC held (i) 363,364  shares of common stock,
         (ii) 423,750 shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of warrants,
         (iii) 690,340  shares of common stock  issuable upon  conversion of the
         Series B  Preferred  Stock at the  conversion  price  in  effect  as of
         December 11, 1998,  which is $13.20 per share,  and (iv) 836,805 shares
         of common  stock  issuable  upon  conversion  of the Series C Preferred
         Stock at the conversion  price in effect as of December 11, 1998, which
         is $9.00 per  share.  The  actual  number  of  shares  of common  stock
         issuable upon conversion of the Preferred Stock is  indeterminable  and
         is  subject  to  adjustment  based on various  factors,  including  the
         floating rate conversion price mechanism  contained in the terms of the
         Preferred  Stock.  However,  the Series B Preferred  Stock and Series C
         Preferred Stock each cannot convert into more than 2,000,000  shares of
         common stock.

         The number of shares  into which RGC can convert and the manner of such
         conversion  is limited by SoftNet's  Certificate  of  Incorporation.  A
         holder of the Series B  Preferred  Stock  cannot  convert  its Series B
         Preferred  Stock in the  event  such  conversion  would  result  in its
         beneficially  owning more than 4.99% of the common stock (not including
         shares  underlying  the  Series  B  Preferred  Stock  or the  Series  B
         Warrants), but they may waive this prohibition by providing us a notice
         of  election  to  convert  at least 61 days  prior to such  conversion.
         Similarly,  a holder of the Series C Preferred Stock cannot convert its
         Series C Preferred Stock in the event such  conversion  would result in
         beneficial  ownership  of more  than  4.99% of the  common  stock  (not
         including shares  underlying the Series C Preferred Stock or the Series
         C  Warrants).  Notwithstanding  this  limitation,  the  holders  of the
         Preferred Stock cannot convert into an aggregate of more than 19.99% of
         the common stock without the approval of the common stock shareholders,
         which is being sought by Proposal Five.

         Accordingly,  the  number  of shares  of  common  stock and  percentage
         ownership  set forth for RGC may  exceed the number of shares of common
         stock it  beneficially  own as of the date of this Proxy  Statement  In
         that regard,  the table may not  adequately  represent  the  beneficial
         ownership of RGC.
</FN>
</TABLE>




<PAGE>


                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Executive Officers

                  The executive  officers and certain other key employees of the
Company are listed below:


             Name                 Age    Positions
- ---------------------------       ---    --------------------------------------
Dr. Lawrence B. Brilliant..        54    Vice Chairman of the Board, President 
                                         and Chief Executive Officer
Garrett J. Girvan..........        53    Chief Operating Officer
Douglas S. Sinclair........        44    Chief Financial Officer
Steven M. Harris...........        44    Vice President, External Affairs, 
                                         Secretary, and General Counsel
Ian B. Aaron...............        38    Vice President, President of ISP 
                                         Channel, Inc. and Director
Kevin Gavin................        40    Senior Vice President, Marketing of
                                         ISP Channel, Inc.
Daniel B. Donnelly.........        36    Senior Vice President, Affiliate Sales
                                         of ISP Channel, Inc.

                  Dr.  Brilliant's  and Mr. Aaron's  backgrounds  are summarized
under "Election of Directors - Nominees" above.

                  Garrett  J.  Girvan has served as  SoftNet's  Chief  Operating
Officer since April 1998 and also served as SoftNet's  Chief  Financial  Officer
from April 1998 to November  1998.  Prior to joining  SoftNet,  Mr.  Girvan held
various  positions  at Viacom  Cable  over a  13-year  period,  including  Chief
Financial Officer and Chief Operating  Officer.  While at Viacom, Mr. Girvan was
involved in the development of Viacom's broadband services.

                  Douglas S.  Sinclair has served as SoftNet's  Chief  Financial
Officer since November 1998.  Prior to joining  SoftNet,  Mr. Sinclair served as
Chief  Financial  Officer of Silicon Valley  Networks,  Inc., a provider of test
management software to telecommunications  and networking companies,  from April
1998 to  November  1998,  Chief  Financial  Officer  of  International  Wireless
Communications,  Inc., an international cellular business operator, from 1995 to
April 1998, Chief Financial Officer of Pittencrieff  Communications  Inc. (PCI),
then a leading  provider  of trunked  radio  services  in the  southwest  United
States,  from 1993 to 1995 and Chief Financial Officer of Pittencrieff  plc., an
oil and gas company based in the United Kingdom, from 1990 to 1993. Mr. Sinclair
took both  Pittencrieff plc and PCI public during his tenures as Chief Financial
Officer. International Wireless Communications,  Inc. filed for protection under
the bankruptcy laws of the United States in September 1998.

                  Steven M. Harris has served as Vice  President,  Secretary and
General  Counsel to SoftNet  since August 1998.  Prior to joining  SoftNet,  Mr.
Harris  worked at Pacific  Telesis  Group,  most  recently as Vice  President-of
Broadband  Services,  where he was responsible  for external  affairs and policy
planning for video services and broadband networks. Previously, he was Executive
Director of Regulatory  Planning and Policy for Pacific Bell with responsibility
for federal and state  regulatory  policies  relating to competition,  corporate
structure, interconnection,  privacy and new technologies. He began with Pacific
Telesis  Group  in  1983 as  Executive  Director  of  Regulatory  Relations,  in
Washington,  D.C. Mr. Harris was Commissioner's  Assistant and Special Assistant
to the  General  Counsel  at  the  Federal  Communications  Commission  and  was
previously in private practice.

                  Kevin Gavin has served as  SoftNet's  Senior  Vice  President,
Marketing since November 1998. Prior to joining  SoftNet,  he served as Regional
Vice President of Teligent, Inc. From November 1991 to January 1996, he was Vice
President of Marketing and Product  Development at Nextel  Communications.  From
1981 to 1991,  Mr. Gavin held various  marketing  and sales  positions at Warner
Cable  Communications,  Inc.,  American  Cablesystems,  Inc., and McCaw Cellular
Communications, Inc.

                  Daniel  B.  Donnelly  has  served  as  SoftNet's  Senior  Vice
President,  Affiliate  Sales since August 1998.  Prior to joining  SoftNet,  Mr.
Donnelly was Vice President at StarSight Telecast, Inc. From July 1994 to August
1998, he held various sales and marketing positions at Showtime Networks, Inc.

Summary of Cash and Certain Other Compensation

                  The following table sets forth  information for the last three
fiscal years concerning  compensation  paid or accrued by the Company to (i) the
current  and former  Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company and (ii) the three
other most highly  compensated  executive  officers  of the Company  whose total
annual salary and incentive  compensation for fiscal year 1998 exceeded $100,000
(collectively, the "Named Officers").
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                           Long-Term 
                                                                                                         Compensation
                                                  Annual Compensation                                       Awards 
                                                                                                          Securities 
                                                                                        Other Annual      Underlying 
Name and Principal Position                  Year       Salary($)         Bonus($)       Compensation       Options 
- ----------------------------------------     ----       ---------         --------      -------------    ------------
<S>                       <C>                <C>         <C>                                                  <C>    
Dr. Lawrence B. Brilliant (1)                1998        $128,396               --               --         200,000
President and Chief Executive Officer
                                             1997             --                --               --              --
                                             1996             --                --               --              --

Garrett J. Girvan (2)                        1998         $89,623               --               --          75,000
Chief Operating Officer and Chief
Financial Officer
                                             1997             --                --               --              --
                                             1996             --                --               --              --

Steven M. Harris (3)                         1998         $22,212               --               --              --
Vice President, Secretary and General
Counsel
                                             1997               --
                                             1996               --

Ian B. Aaron                                 1998        $202,889               --               --         174,500
Vice President, President of ISP Channel,
Inc.
                                             1997        $156,000               --               --          16,000
                                             1996        $189,000               --               --          31,000

A.J.R. Oosthuizen (4)                        1998        $245,820               --               --          52,400
Former President and Chief Executive
Officer
                                             1997        $200,000               --               --          75,000
                                             1996        $200,000          $80,000               --          31,000

<FN>

- ---------------

(1)  Dr.  Brilliant  joined the Company as Chief  Executive  Officer on April 6,
     1998. Prior to that he served on the Board of Directors.  His annual salary
     for fiscal 1998 was $250,000.
(2)  Mr.  Girvan  joined the  Company on April 6,  1998.  His annual  salary for
     fiscal 1998 was  $200,000.  
(3)  Mr.  Harris  joined the Company on August 17, 1998.  His annual  salary for
     fiscal 1998 was $175,000.
(4)  Mr. Oosthuizen resigned as a director and from all executive positions with
     the  Company  effective  April 6, 1998.  On April 6, 1998,  pursuant to the
     terms of a separation and release  agreement (the "Separation  Agreement"),
     Mr.  Oosthuizen  resigned as a director and his employment with the Company
     terminated.  Pursuant to this Separation Agreement, Mr. Oosthuizen became a
     consultant to the Company at a monthly salary of $20,000.  This consultancy
     arrangement  is terminable at will by either the Company or Mr.  Oosthuizen
     at any time after September 15, 1998.
</FN>
</TABLE>

<PAGE>


Stock Option Information

                  Option Grants in Fiscal 1998.  The following  table sets forth
information  with respect to stock  options  granted by the Company to the Named
Officers during Fiscal 1998. No stock appreciation rights were granted in Fiscal
1998.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                     Individual Grants
                                   ----------------------------------------------------                          
                                                                                             Potential Realizable
                                      Number of   Percent of Total   Exercise                  Value at Assumed  
                                     Securities    Options granted   or Base                Annual Rates of Stock
                                     Underlying    to employees       Price                  Price  Appreciation 
                                      Options        in fiscal       ($/Sh)  Expiration       for Option Term(5) 
              Name                 Granted(#)(1)       year(2)         (3)     Date(4)          5%($)     10%($) 
- ---------------------------------  --------------  --------------    ------   --------       ---------  ---------
<S>                                     <C>            <C>            <C>       <C>            <C>      <C>      
Dr. Lawrence B. Brilliant (6)....         7,500         1%            6.88      1/8/08          32,000     82,000
                                         67,500         6%            6.63      3/5/08         281,000    713,000
                                        125,000        11%            8.45      4/7/08         664,000  1,683,000
Garrett J. Girvan (7)............        75,000         7%            8.75      4/6/08         413,000  1,046,000
Steven M. Harris.................             -         -               -          -                 -          -
Ian B. Aaron.....................       174,500        16%            6.88      1/8/08         755,000  1,913,000
A.J.R. Oosthuizen (8)............        52,400         5%            6.88      1/8/08         227,000    575,000
<FN>
                                                                   
(1)  Options  granted under the 1995 Long-Term  Incentive Plan generally  become
     exercisable at a rate of one-third of the shares of common stock underlying
     to the option at the end of each year until  fully  vested or the  employee
     leaves the Company.  Options  granted under the 1998 Stock  Incentive  Plan
     generally  become  exercisable for 25% of the option shares upon completion
     of one (1) year of service measured from the grant date and for the balance
     of  the  option  shares  in  a  series  of  36  successive   equal  monthly
     installments over the three (3) year period of service thereafter.
(2)  The Company  granted options to employees to purchase  1,070,200  shares of
     common stock during  Fiscal 1998. In addition,  options to purchase  73,333
     shares were granted to non-employee consultants during fiscal 1998.
(3)  The exercise price may be paid in (a) cash, (b) shares of common stock held
     for the requisite  period to avoid a charge to the  Company's  earnings for
     financial  reporting  purposes,  (c) through a same-day sale program or (d)
     subject to the  discretion  of the Plan  Administrator,  by  delivery  of a
     full-recourse, secured promissory note payable to the Company.
(4)  The term of the options is typically 10 years.
(5)  Potential realizable value is based on the assumption that the price of the
     common stock  underlying  the option  appreciates at the annual rate shown,
     compounded  annually  from the date of grant  until  the end of the  option
     term. The values are calculated in accordance with rules promulgated by the
     SEC and do not reflect the Company's estimate of future stock appreciation.
(6)  In Fiscal 1998, Dr. Brilliant received options to purchase 20,000 shares of
     common stock  pursuant to his  nomination  to the Board of  Directors.  Dr.
     Brilliant  also  received an  additional  option grant of 55,000  shares of
     common  stock  pursuant  to  a  consulting  agreement.   Subsequently,  Dr.
     Brilliant  was  appointed  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer  of the
     Company,  pursuant  to which he  received  an  additional  option  grant of
     125,000 shares of common stock.
(7)  In Fiscal 1998, Mr. Girvan  received  options to purchase  75,000 shares of
     common stock upon his appointment to serve as the Company's Chief Operating
     Officer  and Chief  Financial  Officer.  Mr.  Girvan was  replaced as Chief
     Financial Officer in November 1998.
(8)  Upon his  resignation  as an officer  and  director  on April 6, 1998,  Mr.
     Oosthuizen's  options  were vested in full.  In  addition,  Mr.  Oosthuizen
     exercised  options to purchase  75,000 shares during Fiscal 1998, each with
     an exercise price of $4.94.
</FN>
</TABLE>


                  Aggregated  Year-End  Option Values.  The following table sets
forth  certain  information  concerning  the number of options  exercised by the
Named  Officers  during the last fiscal year ended  September 30, 1998,  and the
number of shares covered by both  exercisable  and  unexercisable  stock options
held by the Named  Officers as of September  30, 1998.  Also reported are values
for  "in-the-money"  options  that  represent  the positive  spread  between the
respective  exercise prices of outstanding  options and the fair market value of
the Company's common stock as of September 30, 1998 ($10.125).


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                     Number of Securities                                  
                                    Underlying Unexercised         Value of Unexercised    
                                           Options                In-the-Money Options at  
                                   at September 30, 1998(#)       at September 30, 1998(#) 
                                                                                           
     Name                        Exercisable   Unexercisable    Exercisable   Unexercisable
- ---------------------------      -----------   -------------    -----------   -------------

<S>                                   <C>            <C>            <C>             <C>    
Dr. Lawrence B. Brilliant..           55,000         145,000        193,000         279,000
Garrett J. Girvan..........              -            75,000           -            103,000
Steven M. Harris...........              -              -              -               -
Ian B. Aaron...............           92,667         128,833        382,000         429,000
A.J.R. Oosthuizen(1).......           83,400            -           329,000            -
<FN>

(1)  Upon his  resignation  as an officer  and  director  on April 6, 1998,  Mr.
     Oosthuizen's  options  were vested in full.  In  addition,  Mr.  Oosthuizen
     exercised  options to purchase  75,000 shares during Fiscal 1998, each with
     an exercise price of $4.94.
</FN>
</TABLE>


                  Ten-Year  Option   Repricings.   On  November  15,  1996,  the
Compensation/Stock Option Committee approved a stock option repricing program to
provide employee option holders additional  opportunity and incentive to achieve
business plan goals. All options held by employees on that date were repriced to
$4.94 per share, which was the market price on such date. All other terms of the
options remained the same and,  accordingly,  there was no change to the vesting
or term of any option.

                  The table below presents the required  disclosure with respect
to any  repricing  of  options  held by any Named  Officers  during the last ten
completed years.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                                                              Length of
                                                                                                           Original Option
                                          Number of        Market Price      Exercise                      Term Remaining
                                         Securities         of Stock at      Price at                        at Date of
                                         Underlying           Time of         Time of          New          Repricing or
                                       Options Repriced    Repricing or    Repricing or     Exercise          Amendment
Name                        Date         or Amended          Amendment       Amendment        Price           (Years)
- ----                        ----         ----------       --------------  --------------  -------------    ---------------
<S>                       <C>              <C>                 <C>            <C>             <C>                <C>

Ian B. Aaron               2/28/96         31,000              $ 8.25         $ 12.75         $ 8.25             9.6
                          11/15/96         31,000(1)           $ 4.94         $  8.25         $ 4.94             8.9

A.J.R. Oosthuizen          2/28/96         31,000              $ 8.25         $ 12.75         $ 8.25             9.6
                          11/15/96         31,000(1)           $ 4.94         $  8.25         $ 4.94             8.9


<FN>

(1)  Options  repriced on February 28, 1996 at the then current  market price of
     $8.25 and were  further  repriced on November  15, 1996 at the then current
     market price of $4.94.
</FN>
</TABLE>


Employment and Change of Control Agreements

                  On  September  15,  1995,   MTC  entered  into  an  employment
agreement with Mr. Oosthuizen, a director of the Company,  pursuant to which Mr.
Oosthuizen became President of MTC. In July 1997, Mr. Oosthuizen was named Chief
Executive  Officer of the Company  and was granted an annual  salary of $200,000
plus a bonus as  determined  by the Board of  Directors in  accordance  with the
Company's Incentive  Compensation Plan. No bonus was paid to Mr. Oosthuizen with
respect to Fiscal 1997. On October 1, 1997, Mr.  Oosthuizen's  annual salary was
increased to $240,000.  On April 6, 1998,  pursuant to the terms of a separation
and release agreement (the "Separation Agreement"), Mr. Oosthuizen resigned as a
director  and his  employment  with the  Company  terminated.  Pursuant  to this
Separation  Agreement,  Mr.  Oosthuizen  became a consultant to the Company at a
monthly salary of $20,000. This consultancy arrangement is terminable at will by
either the Company or Mr. Oosthuizen at any time after September 15, 1998.

                  On April 7,  1998,  the  Company  entered  into an  employment
agreement with Dr. Lawrence B. Brilliant, a director of the Company, pursuant to
which Dr.  Brilliant  was appointed  Vice  Chairman of the Board,  President and
Chief  Executive  Officer of the  Company for a term of three  years.  Under the
terms of this employment  agreement,  Dr. Brilliant was granted an annual salary
of  $250,000  per year plus  such  bonuses  as the  Compensation  Committee  may
establish from time to time.  Concurrently  with the signing of this  employment
agreement,  Dr. Brilliant received a Non-Qualified Stock Option to purchase from
the  Company a total of 125,000  shares of common  stock  under the terms of the
Long Term Incentive Plan.

                  Under the Company's  1998 Stock  Incentive  Plan,  approval of
which is being  sought by  Proposal  Four,  in the  event  that the  Company  is
acquired by merger or sale of substantially all of its assets,  each outstanding
option or other award under the 1998 Stock Incentive Plan will immediately vest,
except to the  extent  the  Company's  obligations  under  that  option or award
assumed by the successor corporation or such successor  corporation  substitutes
an award with substantially the same economic value.

                  Under the Company's Amended 1995 Long-Term Incentive Plan (the
"1995 Plan"),  upon an acquisition of the Company  pursuant to a merger or asset
sale, the option will, at the discretion of the Stock Option  Committee,  either
be assumed by any successor entity,  with or without  accelerated vesting of the
option shares,  or terminate upon the  acquisition  following a thirty  (30)-day
period  during which the option will be  exercisable  in full on an  accelerated
basis.

                  Under the  Company's  Employee  Stock Option Plan (the "Option
Plan"),  in the event the Company is acquired by merger or sale of substantially
all of its  assets,  each  outstanding  option  will be either be assumed by the
successor  corporation or replaced by the successor  corporation  with an option
with substantially the same economic value.

                  The  Company  currently  has no  other  compensatory  plan  or
arrangement  with any of the  Named  Officers  where  the  amounts  paid  exceed
$100,000 and which are activated upon resignation,  termination or retirement of
any such Named Officer upon a change in control of the Company.

Indemnification of Directors and Limitation of Liability

                  The  Company's  Bylaws  provide that the Company may indemnify
its  directors,  officers and other  employees and agents to the fullest  extent
permitted by law. The Company has also entered into  agreements to indemnify its
directors and executive officers,  in addition to the  indemnification  provided
for in the Company's  Bylaws.  The Company  believes that these  provisions  and
agreements are necessary to attract and retain qualified directors and executive
officers. At present, there is no pending litigation or proceeding involving any
director,  officer,  employee or agent of the Company where indemnification will
be required or permitted.  The Company is not aware of any threatened litigation
or proceeding that might result in a claim for such indemnification.  Insofar as
indemnification  for  liabilities  arising  under  the  Securities  Act  may  be
permitted to directors,  officers or persons controlling the Company pursuant to
the foregoing provisions,  the Company has been informed that, in the opinion of
the Commission,  such  indemnification  is against public policy as expressed in
the Securities Act and is therefore unenforceable.



<PAGE>


             COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The  Compensation  Committee is  responsible  for the  Company's  executive
compensation  policies and for annually  determining the compensation to be paid
to the  executive  officers of the Company.  During  Fiscal  1998,  the Board of
Directors assumed all of the responsibilities of the Compensation Committee.

Overview and Philosophy

                  The executive  compensation program of the Company is intended
to provide overall levels of compensation  for the executive  officers which are
competitive  for the  industries  and the  geographic  areas  within  which they
operate,  the individual's  experience and contribution to long-term  success of
the  Company.  The  Board  believes  that  its  task  of  determining  fair  and
competitive compensation is ultimately judgmental.

                  The  program is  composed  of base  salary,  annual  incentive
compensation,  equity based incentives and other benefits generally available to
all  employees.  As of September  30, 1998,  options on 1,320,125  shares of the
Company's  common stock were  outstanding and 1,070,200  options were granted to
employees during the fiscal year ended September 30, 1998.

Base Salary

                  The base salary for each executive is intended primarily to be
competitive  with companies in the industries and geographic  areas in which the
Company competes.  In making annual  adjustments to base salary,  the Board also
considers  the  individual's  performance  over a period  of time as well as any
other  information  which may be  available  as to the  value of the  particular
individual's  past  and  prospective  future  services  to  the  Company.   This
information includes comments and performance evaluations by the Company's Chief
Executive  Officer and Chief  Operating  Officer.  The Board  considers all such
data; it does not prescribe  the relative  weight to be given to any  particular
component.

Annual Incentive Compensation

                  Annual  incentive  compensation is ordinarily  determined by a
formula which considers the overall operations and financial  performance of the
Company and its subsidiaries.

Long-Term Incentives

                  In general,  the Board believes that equity based compensation
should form a part of an executive's total compensation  package.  Stock options
are granted to executives because they directly relate the executive's  earnings
to the stock price appreciation realized by the Company's  stockholders over the
option period.  Stock options also provide executives the opportunity to acquire
an  ownership  interest  in the  Company.  The number of shares  covered by each
executive's  option is  determined  by factors  similar to those  considered  in
establishing base salary.

Stock Option Repricing Program

                  On February 28, 1996, the Board of Directors  approved a stock
option  repricing   program  to  provide  employee  option  holders   additional
opportunity  and incentive to achieve  business plan goals.  The exercise prices
for all options held by employees on that date were repriced to $8.25 per share,
which was the market price on that date. All other terms of the options remained
the same and,  accordingly,  there was no change to the  vesting  or term of any
option.  In addition,  on November 15, 1996, the Board of Directors  approved an
additional  stock option  repricing  program to further provide  employee option
holders with  additional  opportunity  and  incentive to achieve  business  plan
goals. All options held by employees on November 15, 1996 were repriced to $4.94
per share, which was the market price on that date.

Other

                  Other  benefits  are  generally  those  available to all other
employees  in the  Company,  or a  subsidiary,  as  appropriate.  Together  with
perquisites,  these  benefits  did not  exceed 10% of any  executive's  combined
salary and bonus in Fiscal 1998.

Compensation for Chief Executive Officer

                  The  Board  applies  the same  standard  in  establishing  the
compensation  of the  Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer as are used for other
executives.  However,  there are  procedural  differences.  The Chief  Executive
Officer  does  not   participate  in  setting  the  amount  and  nature  of  the
compensation. Mr. Oosthuizen did not receive a bonus for Fiscal 1998.

Deduction Limit for Executive Compensation

                  Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code,  enacted in 1993,
generally  disallows a tax deduction to publicly held companies for compensation
exceeding $1 million paid to certain of the  corporation's  executive  officers.
The  limitation  applies  only to  compensation  which is not  considered  to be
performance-based     compensation.     Compensation    which    qualifies    as
performance-based  compensation  will  not  have to be taken  into  account  for
purposes of this limitation.  The non-performance  based compensation to be paid
to the  Company's  executive  officers  for  Fiscal  1998 did not  exceed the $1
million  limit per officer,  nor is it expected that the  non-performance  based
compensation to be paid to the Company's executive officers for Fiscal 1999 will
exceed that limit.  Because it is very unlikely that the compensation payable to
any of the Company's  executive officers in the foreseeable future will approach
the $1 million limit, the Board has not taken any action to limit or restructure
the elements of cash compensation  payable to the Company's  executive officers.
The Board will reconsider this matter should the individual  compensation of any
executive officer ever approach the $1 million level.

                  This report is submitted by the Compensation  Committee of the
Board of  Directors of the Company,  as of the fiscal year ended  September  30,
1998.

                                                  Sean P. Doherty, Chairman
                                                  Ronald I. Simon
                                                  Robert C. Harris, Jr.



<PAGE>


                                PERFORMANCE GRAPH

                  Set  forth  below is a  comparison  of the  total  stockholder
return on the Company's common stock for the period beginning September 30, 1993
and ending  September  30, 1998 with the total  stockholder  return for the same
period  for the AMEX Stock  Market  Index (a broad  equity  market  index  which
includes  the  stock  of  companies  traded  on  AMEX)  and  the  AMEX  Computer
Programming, Data Processing, & Other Computer Related Services Industrial Index
(an index including companies with primary SIC 7370-7379). The total stockholder
return  reflects the annual  change in share price,  assuming an  investment  of
$100.00 on September 30, 1993 plus the  reinvestment  of  dividends,  if any. No
dividends were paid on the Company's  common stock during the period shown.  The
return shown is based on the annual percentage change during each fiscal year in
the five year period ended September 30, 1998. The stock price performance shown
below is not necessarily indicative of future stock price performance.

                                [Graphic Omitted]


                Sep-30-93  Sep-30-94  Sep-30-95  Sep-29-96  Sep-30-97  Sep-30-98
- -------------   ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                
SoftNet                                                                         
Systems, Inc.     $100.00    $176.27    $368.04    $158.19    $174.33    $261.50
                                                                                
AMEX Stock                                                                      
Market Index      $100.00     $97.90    $120.46    $122.76    $153.93    $132.62
                                                                                
AMEX                                                                            
Computer                                                                        
Industrial                                                                      
Index             $100.00     $82.60    $119.78    $131.47    $187.05    $176.42
                                                                                
<PAGE>                                



                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

Issuance of 5% Convertible Subordinated Debentures

                  In fiscal 1998, the Company issued $1,443,750 principal amount
of its 5%  Convertible  Subordinated  Debentures  due  September 30, 2002 to Mr.
R.C.W. Mauran, a beneficial owner of more than 5% of the Company's common stock,
in exchange for the  assignment to the Company of certain  equipment  leases and
other  consideration.  The debentures are  convertible  into common stock of the
Company at $8.25 per share, after December 31, 1998.

Issuance of Preferred Stock

                  The terms of the 5% Preferred Stock limit its holders, such as
RGC, from beneficially owning more than 4.99% of the common stock.  Nonetheless,
the Company lists the 5% Preferred Stock  transactions  here because RGC has the
ability to convert  into a  substantial  number of shares of common stock in the
aggregate.

                  On December 31, 1997,  the Company issued to RGC, 5,000 shares
of its Series A  Preferred  Stock and  warrants to  purchase  150,000  shares of
common  stock at an exercise  price of $7.95 per share (the "Series A Warrants")
for an aggregate purchase price of $5,000,000. As of the Record Date, there were
no shares of Series A Preferred Stock outstanding.

                  On May 29,  1998,  the  Company  issued  to RGC and  Shoreline
Associates I, LLC ("Shoreline"),  9,000 and 1,000 shares,  respectively,  of its
Series B Preferred  Stock and  warrants to purchase  180,000 and 20,000  shares,
respectively,  of common  stock  (the  "Series B  Warrants"),  for an  aggregate
purchase price of  $10,000,000.  The Series B Warrants have an exercise price of
$13.75 per share. Prior to February 28, 1999, the Conversion Price of the Series
B Preferred Stock (the "Series B Conversion Price") is $13.20.  Thereafter,  the
Series B Conversion  Price will be the lower of $13.20 (subject to an escalation
provision  pending  certain market  conditions  around such date) and a five day
average market price within a 20-day trading period prior to conversion, subject
to adjustment upon certain  conditions.  As of the Record Date, 10,125 shares of
Series B  Preferred  Stock  were  outstanding  as a  result  of the  payment  of
additional shares of Series B Preferred Stock as dividends.

                  On August 31, 1998,  the Company issued to RGC 7,500 shares of
its Series C Preferred  Stock and warrants to purchase  93,750  shares of common
stock at an exercise  price of $9.375 per share (the "Series C Warrants") for an
aggregate  purchase price of  $7,500,000.  Prior to May 31, 1999, the conversion
price of the Series C  Preferred  Stock  (the  "Series C  Conversion  Price") is
$9.00.  Thereafter,  the  Series C  Conversion  Price will be the lower of $9.00
(subject to an escalation  provision  pending certain market  conditions  around
such date) and a five day average  market price within a 30-day  trading  period
prior to conversion,  subject to adjustment upon certain  conditions.  As of the
Record Date,  7,531.25 shares of Series C Preferred Stock were  outstanding as a
result of payment of additional shares of Series C Preferred Stock as dividends.

Sale of Certain CDI Assets

                  During Fiscal 1997,  Communicate Direct,  Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary  of the  Company  ("CDI"),  sold the portion of its  operations  that
support its Fujitsu  maintenance base in the Chicago  metropolitan area to a new
company  formed by John I.  Jellinek,  a former  president  and Chief  Executive
Officer and a then director of the Company, and Philip Kenny, a then director of
the  Company.  The  buyers  acquired  certain  assets of CDI in  exchange  for a
$209,000  promissory note and the assumption of trade payables of  approximately
$750,000.  In addition,  at the closing the buyers  repaid  $438,000 of existing
Company  bank debt and  entered  into a sub-lease  of CDI's  facility in Buffalo
Grove,  Illinois. At the closing, the buyer merged with Telcom Midwest, LLC. and
Messrs.  Jellinek  and Kenny and two other  shareholders  of the merged  company
personally  guaranteed  obligations  arising  out of the  promissory  note,  the
sub-lease  arrangement  and  trade  payables.  The  personal  guarantees  of the
promissory  note are  several.  The personal  guarantees  of the  sub-lease  are
limited  to  $400,000  and  are on a  joint  and  several  basis.  The  personal
guarantees of trade payables are on a joint and several basis but are limited to
Messrs. Jellinek and Kenny.  Concurrent with this transaction,  Messrs. Jellinek
and Kenny resigned from the Company's board. The transaction was approved by the
disinterested members of the Company's board.

IMNET Software Inc.

                  In June 1996,  the Company  acquired the  exclusive  worldwide
manufacturing   rights  to  IMNET's  MegaSAR   Microfilm   Jukebox  (the  "IMNET
Agreement") and completed and amended its obligations under a previous agreement
with IMNET.  Per the terms of the IMNET  Agreement,  the  Company  issued a $2.9
million note for prepaid license fees, software inventory, manufacturing rights,
and certain  other  payables.  Approximately  $2.5 million was paid on this note
during the fourth  quarter of Fiscal 1996.  Subsequently,  in Fiscal  1997,  the
outstanding $410,000 promissory note was further reduced by $249,000,  and a new
promissory  note in the face amount of $161,000 was executed.  This  transaction
was approved by the disinterested members of the Company's board.  Following the
transaction,  John J. McDonough and John I. Jellinek  resigned from the Board of
Directors of IMNET board and James  Gordon,  a director of IMNET,  resigned from
the Company's board.

                  During the fourth quarter of Fiscal 1996, the Company  decided
to integrate  the IMNET  microfilm  retrieval  software  with  another  software
developer's product then being distributed by the Company,  requiring less IMNET
software than previously  assumed.  As a result, the Company recorded a one-time
charge  of $1.5  million  to write off  software  inventory.  Subsequent  to the
acquisition  of the  manufacturing  rights  from IMNET,  technical  difficulties
delayed the transfer of technical and manufacturing know-how. In September 1997,
the Company  recorded a one-time  charge to write off the remaining $1.0 million
in assets  associated  with the IMNET  Agreement.  The Company is  currently  in
negotiations   with  IMNET  to  complete  the  transfer  of  the  technical  and
manufacturing know-how.

                  During  Fiscal 1996,  the Company sold its entire  holdings in
IMNET for net proceeds of $7.7 million. Accordingly, the Company recorded a gain
on the sale of securities of $5.7 million.

Employment Agreement with Mr. Oosthuizen

                  On  September  15,  1995,   MTC  entered  into  an  employment
agreement with Mr. Oosthuizen, a director of the Company,  pursuant to which Mr.
Oosthuizen became President of MTC. In July 1997, Mr. Oosthuizen was named Chief
Executive  Officer of the Company  and was granted an annual  salary of $200,000
plus a bonus as  determined  by the Board of  Directors in  accordance  with the
Company's Incentive  Compensation Plan. No bonus was paid to Mr. Oosthuizen with
respect to Fiscal 1997. On October 1, 1997, Mr.  Oosthuizen's  annual salary was
increased to $240,000.  On April 6, 1998,  pursuant to the terms of a separation
and release agreement (the "Separation Agreement"), Mr. Oosthuizen resigned as a
director  and his  employment  with the  Company  terminated.  Pursuant  to this
Separation  Agreement,  Mr.  Oosthuizen  became a consultant to the Company at a
monthly salary of $20,000. This consultancy arrangement is terminable at will by
either the Company or Mr. Oosthuizen at any time after September 15, 1998.

Consulting Payments to Mr. Hamm

                  In Fiscal  1994,  the Board voted to  compensate  Mr.  Hamm, a
director of the  Company,  $150,000,  payable in  installments,  for  previously
uncompensated  services that he rendered to the Company as a consultant over the
prior ten years.  The  Company's  entire  obligation to Mr. Hamm with respect to
this unpaid compensation was satisfied as of January 1998.

                COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(a) OF THE EXCHANGE ACT

     Under the securities  laws of the United States,  the Company's  directors,
its executive (and certain other) officers, and any person holding more than ten
percent of the Company's  common stock are required to report their ownership of
common stock and any changes in that  ownership to the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission (the  "Commission") and any exchange or quotation system on which the
common stock is listed or quoted. Specific due dates for these reports have been
established  and the Company is required to report in this proxy  statement  any
failure to file by these dates. During the fiscal year ended September 30, 1998,
to the  knowledge of the  Company,  all of these  filings were  satisfied by its
directors and officers. In making this statement,  the Company has relied on the
written  representations of its directors and officers and copies of the reports
they have filed with the  Commission.  The Company does not have any ten percent
stockholders.


<PAGE>



                                 PROPOSAL EIGHT

               CONFIRMATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

    The Board of Directors has selected  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP to audit the
financial  statements of the Company for the year ending September 30, 1999, and
recommends  that the  stockholders  confirm the selection.  Confirmation of this
selection requires approval by at least a majority of the shares of common stock
present in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting.  In the event of a negative
vote, the Board will reconsider its selection.

    Representatives of PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP are expected to be present at
the Annual  Meeting,  will have the  opportunity  to make a statement if they so
desire, and are expected to be available to respond to appropriate questions.

THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  THAT  THE  STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE  "FOR"  THE
CONFIRMATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS


                             STOCKHOLDERS' PROPOSALS

    Stockholders  are entitled to present  proposals for action at a forthcoming
meeting if they comply with the  requirements of the proxy rules  promulgated by
the Securities and Exchange Commission. Proposals of stockholders of the Company
intended to be presented for  consideration at the Company's 2000 Annual Meeting
of  Stockholders  must be received by the Company no later than October 1, 1999,
in order  that they may be  included  in the proxy  statement  and form of proxy
related to that meeting.

    The attached proxy card grants the proxy holders discretionary  authority to
vote on any matter raised at the Annual  Meeting.  If a  stockholder  intends to
submit a  proposal  at the  2000  Annual  Meeting,  which  is not  eligible  for
inclusion in the proxy statement and form of proxy relating to that meeting, the
stockholder  must do so no later than  December  15, 1999.  If such  stockholder
fails to comply with the foregoing notice  provision,  the proxy holders will be
allowed to use their discretionary  voting authority when the proposal is raised
at the 2000 Annual Meeting.


                                  OTHER MATTERS

     Management knows of no matters,  other than those referred to in this proxy
statement,  which will be presented to the Annual Meeting. However, if any other
matters properly come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment,  the persons
named in the  accompanying  proxy  will vote it in  accordance  with  their best
judgment on such matters.

     The Company has furnished its financial  statements to  stockholders in its
1998 Annual Report which  accompanies  this Proxy  Statement.  In addition,  the
Company will provide, without charge to any stockholder,  on the request of such
stockholder, an additional copy of the 1998 Annual Report and the Company's most
recent Form 10-K, and any amendments thereto. Requests for copies of such report
should be directed to Steven M.  Harris,  Secretary,  650 Townsend  Street,  San
Francisco, California 94103; telephone number (415) 365-2500.




<PAGE>


                       Documents Incorporated by Reference

                  The  following   documents  filed  by  the  Company  with  the
Commission  (File No.  1-5270)  pursuant to the  Exchange  Act are  incorporated
herein by reference:

1.   The  Company's  Annual  Report  on Form  10-K  for the  fiscal  year  ended
     September 30, 1997.

2.   The  Company's  Current  Report on Form 8-K filed  with the  Commission  on
     January 12, 1998.

3.   The Company's  Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A filed with the Commission on
     January 28, 1998.

4.   The  Company's  Current  Report on Form 8-K filed  with the  Commission  on
     February 12, 1998.

5.   The Company's  Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended December
     31, 1997.

6.   The Company's Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on April
     4, 1998.

7.   The Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31,
     1998.

8.   The Company's  Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on June
     1, 1998.

9.   The Company's  Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on July
     28, 1998.

10.  The Company's  Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30,
     1998, as amended.

11.  The  Company's  Current  Report on Form 8-K filed  with the  Commission  on
     September 14, 1998.

                  The  Company's  Current  Report  on Form 8-K filed on July 28,
1998 includes restated financial statements to reflect the treatment of KCI as a
discontinued  operation.  Financial  statements  filed after July 28, 1998, will
continue to reflect the treatment of KCI as a discontinued  operation  until the
Company no longer  operates such  division.  The Company will  provide,  without
charge,  a copy  of any  document  hereby  incorporated  by  reference  to  each
stockholder who requests  copies of such  documents.  Requests should be made to
the Company at 650 Townsend  Street,  San Francisco,  California,  94103;  ATTN:
Steven M. Harris, Secretary.





<PAGE>


                                                                      APPENDIX A
                                       A-5

                          AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER

                  AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER, dated as of ____________,  1999,
pursuant to Section 252 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the "DGCL") and
Section 907 of the New York  Business  Corporation  Law (the  "NYBCL"),  between
SoftNet  Systems,  Inc., a New York  corporation  having its principal  place of
business at 650 Townsend Street,  San Francisco,  CA 94103 (the "Company"),  and
SoftNet Systems, Inc., a Delaware corporation and wholly-owned subsidiary of the
Company,  having its  principal  place of business at 650 Townsend  Street,  San
Francisco, CA 94103 (the "Surviving Company").

                              W I T N E S S E T H:

                  WHEREAS,  the  Company is a  corporation  duly  organized  and
existing under the laws of the State of New York with total  authorized  capital
stock of  Twenty-Nine  Million  (29,000,000)  shares,  consisting of Twenty-Five
Million  (25,000,000)  shares of  common  stock,  $.01 par value per share  (the
"Company Common Stock") and Four Million  (4,000,000) shares of preferred stock,
$.10 par value per share (the "Company Preferred Stock").

                  WHEREAS, the Surviving Company is a corporation duly organized
and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware and will have, effective at
the  Effective  Date (as defined  below) total  authorized  capital stock of One
Hundred Four Million  (104,000,000)  shares,  consisting of One Hundred  Million
(100,000,000)  shares of common stock,  $.01 par value per share (the "Surviving
Company Common Stock"),  and Four Million (4,000,000) shares of preferred stock,
$.10 par value per share (the "Surviving Company Preferred Stock").

                  WHEREAS,  the  Boards  of  Directors  of the  Company  and the
Surviving  Company have each adopted  resolutions  approving  this Agreement and
Plan of Merger.

                  NOW  THEREFORE,  in  consideration  of the  foregoing  and the
undertakings herein contained and for other good and valuable consideration, the
receipt and  sufficiency  of which is hereby  acknowledged,  the parties  hereto
agree as follows:

                  1.  Merger.  The Company  shall be merged  into the  Surviving
Company  pursuant to Section  252 of the DGCL and Section 907 of the NYBCL.  The
Surviving  Company  shall  survive  the  merger  herein  contemplated  and shall
continue  to be  governed  by the laws of the State of  Delaware.  The  separate
corporate  existence of the Company  shall cease  forthwith  upon the  Effective
Date. The merger of the Company into the Surviving  Company shall hereinafter be
referred to as the "Merger."

                  2.  Shareholder  Approval.  As soon as  practicable  after the
execution of this  Agreement  and Plan of Merger,  the Company and the Surviving
Company shall, if necessary under the DGCL and NYBCL,  submit this Agreement and
Plan of Merger to their respective shareholders for approval.

                  3.  Effective  Date.  The Merger shall be  effective  upon the
filing of this Agreement and Plan of Merger with the Secretaries of State of the
States  of  Delaware  and  New  York,  which  filings  shall  be made as soon as
practicable  after all required  shareholder  approvals have been obtained.  The
time of such  effectiveness  shall  hereinafter be referred to as the "Effective
Date."

                  4. Common Stock and  Preferred  Stock of the  Company.  On the
Effective  Date,  by virtue of the Merger and  without any action on the part of
the holder thereof, (1) each share of common stock of the Company shall cease to
exist and shall be changed and converted into one fully paid and  non-assessable
share of the  Surviving  Company  Common Stock and (2) each share of the Company
Preferred Stock shall cease to exist and shall be changed and converted into one
fully paid and non-assessable share of the Surviving Company Preferred Stock.

                  5. Stock Certificates. On and after the Effective Date, all of
the  outstanding  certificates  which prior to that time  represented  shares of
Company  Common  Stock and  Company  Preferred  Stock  shall be  deemed  for all
purposes to evidence  ownership of and to represent  the shares of the Surviving
Company Common Stock and Surviving Company Preferred Stock into which the shares
of the Company  represented by such  certificates  have been converted as herein
provided. The registered owner on the books and records of the Surviving Company
or its transfer agent of any such outstanding  stock  certificate  shall,  until
such  certificate  shall have been  surrendered  for transfer or  conversion  or
otherwise accounted for to the Surviving Company or its transfer agent, have and
be  entitled  to exercise  any voting and other  rights  with  respect to and to
receive any dividend and other  distributions  upon the shares of the  Surviving
Company evidenced by such outstanding certificate as above provided.

                  6.   Stock Option Plans.

                           (a) On the  Effective  Date, if any options or rights
granted under either the Company's 1998 Stock Incentive Plan or the Amended 1995
Long Term Incentive Plan remain  outstanding,  then the Surviving  Company shall
assume the outstanding and unexercised portions of such options and such options
shall be changed and  converted  into  options to purchase  common  stock of the
Surviving Company, such that an option to purchase one (1) share of common stock
of the Company  shall be  converted  into an option to purchase one (1) share of
common  stock of the  Surviving  Company.  No other  changes  in the  terms  and
conditions of such options shall occur.

                           (b) One (1) share of the Surviving  Company's  Common
Stock shall be reserved for issuance upon the exercise
of each option to purchase one (1) share of the Surviving Company's Common Stock
so reserved immediately prior to the Effective Date.

                           (c) No  "additional  benefits"  within the meaning of
Section  424(a)(2)  of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986 (as amended)  shall be
accorded to the optionholders pursuant to the assumption of their Options.

                  7.   Warrants.

                           (a)  On  the  Effective  Date,  all  outstanding  and
unexercised  warrants  issued by the Company shall be charged and converted into
warrants to purchase common stock of the Surviving Company,  such that a warrant
to purchase one (1) share of common stock of the Company shall be converted into
a warrant to purchase one (1) share of common stock of the Surviving Company. No
other changes in the terms and conditions of such warrants shall occur.

                           (b) One (1) share of the Surviving  Company's  Common
Stock shall be  reserved  for  issuance  upon the  exercise  of each  warrant to
purchase  one (1) share of the  Surviving  Company's  Common  Stock so  reserved
immediately prior to the Effective Date.

                  8. Subordinated Convertible Debentures. On the Effective Date,
the Surviving  Company shall assume all obligations of the Company in connection
with the Company's issuance of 9% Convertible  Subordinated Debentures due 2000,
6% Convertible  Subordinated Debentures due 2002 and 5% Convertible Subordinated
Debentures due 2002 (the "Debentures"),  and the Debentures shall be convertible
into shares of the common stock of the Surviving  Company  rather than shares of
the common stock of the Company. No other changes in the terms and conditions of
the Debentures shall occur.

                  9. Cable Affiliate  Incentive Plan. On the Effective Date, the
Surviving  Company  shall  assume  all  obligations  of the  Company  under  the
Company's Cable Affiliate Incentive Plan (the "Incentive Plan"). For every share
of the Company's  Common Stock reserved for issuance under the Incentive Plan, a
share of the Surviving  Company's  Common Stock shall  similarly be reserved for
issuance under the Incentive Plan.

                  10.  Employee  Benefit  Plans.  On  the  Effective  Date,  the
Surviving  Company shall assume all obligations of the Company under any and all
employee  benefit plans in effect as of such date with respect to which employee
rights or accrued  benefits are  outstanding  as of such date.  On the Effective
Date, the Surviving Company shall adopt and continue in effect all such employee
benefit plans upon the same terms and  conditions as were in effect  immediately
prior to the Merger.

                  11.  Succession.  On the Effective Date, the Surviving Company
shall succeed to all of the rights, privileges,  debts, liabilities,  powers and
property  of the Company in the manner of and as more fully set forth in Section
259 of the DGCL.  Without  limiting the foregoing,  upon the Effective Date, all
property,  rights,  privileges,   franchises,  patents,  trademarks,   licenses,
registrations,  and other  assets of every kind and  description  of the Company
shall be  transferred  to,  vested in and developed  upon the Surviving  Company
without further act or deed and all property,  rights,  and every other interest
of the Company and the Surviving Company shall be as effectively the property of
the  Surviving  Company as they were of the Company and the  Surviving  Company,
respectively.  All rights of  creditors  of the  Company  and all liens upon any
property  of  the  Company  shall  be  preserved  unimpaired,   and  all  debts,
liabilities and duties of the Company shall attach to the Surviving  Company and
may be enforced against it to the same extent as if said debts,  liabilities and
duties had been incurred or contracted by it.

                  12.  Certificate of Incorporation  and Bylaws.  From and after
the Effective Date, the Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws of the Surviving
Company  shall  continue  in full  force and  effect  until  further  amended in
accordance with the provisions thereof and applicable law.

                  13.  Directors  and  Officers.  The  members  of the  Board of
Directors and the officers of the Surviving  Company on the Effective Date shall
continue in office until the expiration of their  respective terms of office and
until their successors have been elected and qualified.

                  14.  Further  Assurances.  From  time  to  time,  as and  when
required by the Surviving Company or by its successors and assigns,  there shall
be  executed  and  delivered  on  behalf  of the  Company  such  deeds and other
instruments,  and there shall be taken or caused to be taken by it such  further
and  other  action  as shall be  appropriate  or  necessary  in order to best or
perfect in or to confirm of record or  otherwise  in the  Surviving  Company the
title  to and  possession  of  all  the  property,  interests,  assets,  rights,
privileges,  immunities,  powers,  franchises and authority of the Company,  and
otherwise to carry out the purposes of this  Agreement  and Plan of Merger,  and
the officers and  directors of the Company are fully  authorized in the name and
on behalf of the  Company or  otherwise  to take any and all such  action and to
execute and deliver any and all such deeds and other instruments.

                  15.  Abandonment.  Notwithstanding the approval of this Merger
Agreement by the  shareholders of the Company or by the sole  stockholder of the
Surviving  Company,  at any time  before the  Effective  Date,  (a) this  Merger
Agreement  may be  terminated  and the Merger may be  abandoned  by the Board of
Directors of either the Company or the Surviving  Company or both,  including by
reason of a determination,  in the sole discretion of either Board of Directors,
that  holders  of an  unacceptable  number of shares  intend to  exercise  their
statutory  appraisal  rights  pursuant to Section  623 of the New York  Business
Corporation  Law, or (b) the  consummation  of the Merger may be deferred  for a
reasonable  period of time if, in the opinion of the Boards of  Directors of the
Company and the Surviving Company, such action would be in the best interests of
such  corporations.  In the event of termination of this Merger Agreement,  this
Merger  Agreement  shall  become  void and of no effect  and  there  shall be no
liability  on the  part of  either  corporation  or  their  respective  Board of
Directors or stockholders  with respect  thereto,  except that the Company shall
pay all expenses  incurred in  connection  with the Merger or in respect of this
Merger Agreement or relating thereto.

                  16.  Conditions to Merger.  The obligation of the corporations
to effect the transactions contemplated hereby is subject to satisfaction of the
following  conditions  (any or all of  which  may be  waived  by  either  of the
corporations in its sole discretion to the extent permitted by law):

                           (a)  the  Merger  shall  have  been  approved  by the
shareholders of the Company in accordance with applicable  provisions of the New
York Business Corporations Law;

                           (b) The Company, as sole stockholder of the Surviving
Company,  shall have approved the Merger in accordance with the Delaware General
Corporation Law; and

                           (c) any and all  consents,  permits,  authorizations,
approvals,  and  orders  deemed  in the sole  discretion  of the  Company  to be
material to the consummation of the Merger shall have been obtained.

                  18.  Amendment.  This  Agreement  and  Plan of  Merger  may be
amended by the Boards of Directors of the Company and the  Surviving  Company at
any time prior to the Effective Date, provided that an amendment made subsequent
to the  approval of this  Agreement  and Plan of Merger by the  shareholders  of
either the Company or the  Surviving  Company  shall not (1) alter or change the
amount  or kind of  shares,  securities,  cash,  property  and/or  rights  to be
received in  exchange  for or on  conversion  of all or any of the shares of any
class or series thereof of such corporation, (2) alter or change any term of the
Certificate  of  Incorporation  of the  Surviving  Company to be effected by the
Merger or (3) alter or change any of the terms and  conditions of this Agreement
and Plan of Merger if such  alteration  or change  would  adversely  affect  the
holders of any class or series of the stock of such corporation.

                  19.  Governing  Law. This Agreement and Plan of Merger and the
legal  relations  between the parties  shall be  governed  by and  construed  in
accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware.

                  20.  Counterparts.  In  order to  facilitate  the  filing  and
recording of this Agreement and Plan of Merger,  the same may be executed in any
number of counterparts, each of which shall be deemed to be an original.



<PAGE>


                  IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the parties hereto has caused this
Agreement  and Plan of Merger to be executed  and  attested on its behalf by its
officers hereunto duly authorized, as of the date first above written.

                                             SoftNet Systems, Inc.,
                                              a Delaware corporation

                                              
                                              By: --------------------------- 
                                              Name:-------------------------- 
                                              Title: ------------------------ 

ATTESTED:

By: --------------------------- 
Name:-------------------------- 
Title: ------------------------ 


                                              SoftNet Systems, Inc.,
                                              a Delaware corporation

                                              
                                              By: --------------------------- 
                                              Name:-------------------------- 
                                              Title: ------------------------ 

ATTESTED:

By: --------------------------- 
Name:-------------------------- 
Title: ------------------------ 

<PAGE>

                                                                      APPENDIX B

              SECTION 623 PROCEDURE TO ENFORCE SHAREHOLDER'S RIGHT
                         TO RECEIVE PAYMENT FOR SHARES.

                  (a) A  shareholder  intending  to  enforce  his right  under a
section  of this  chapter  to receive  payment  for his  shares if the  proposed
corporate  action referred to therein is taken shall file with the  corporation,
before the meeting of  shareholders  at which the action is submitted to a vote,
or at such meeting but before the vote,  written  objection  to the action.  The
objection  shall  include  a notice of his  election  to  dissent,  his name and
residence address,  the number and classes of shares as to which he dissents and
a demand  for  payment  of the fair  value of his shares if the action is taken.
Such objection is not required from any  shareholder to whom the corporation did
not give notice of such  meeting in  accordance  with this  chapter or where the
proposed  action is  authorized  by written  consent of  shareholders  without a
meeting.

                  (b)  Within  ten days  after the  shareholders'  authorization
date,  which  term  as used  in  this  section  means  the  date  on  which  the
shareholders'  vote authorizing such action was taken, or the date on which such
consent  without a meeting was obtained  from the  requisite  shareholders,  the
corporation  shall  give  written  notice of such  authorization  or  consent by
registered  mail to each  shareholder  who filed written  objection or from whom
written  objection was not required,  excepting any shareholder who voted for or
consented  in writing to the  proposed  action and who thereby is deemed to have
elected not to enforce his right to receive payment for his shares.

                  (c) Within  twenty days after the giving of notice to him, any
shareholder  from whom  written  objection  was not  required  and who elects to
dissent  shall  file with the  corporation  a written  notice of such  election,
stating his name and residence  address,  the number and classes of shares as to
which he dissents and a demand for payment of the fair value of his shares.  Any
shareholder  who elects to dissent  from a merger  under  section 905 (Merger of
subsidiary corporation) or paragraph (c) of section 907 (Merger or consolidation
of domestic and foreign  corporations)  or from a share exchange under paragraph
(g) of  section  913  (Share  exchanges)  shall  file a  written  notice of such
election to dissent  within twenty days after the giving to him of a copy of the
plan of merger or exchange or an outline of the material  features thereof under
section 905 or 913.

                  (d) A  shareholder  may not dissent as to less than all of the
shares,  as to which he has a right to dissent,  held by him of record,  that he
owns  beneficially.  A nominee  or  fiduciary  may not  dissent on behalf of any
beneficial  owner as to less than all of the shares of such  owner,  as to which
such nominee or fiduciary has a right to dissent, held of record by such nominee
or fiduciary.

                  (e) Upon consummation of the corporate action, the shareholder
shall  cease to have any of the rights of a  shareholder  except the right to be
paid the fair value of his shares and any other  rights  under this  section.  A
notice of election may be withdrawn by the  shareholder at any time prior to his
acceptance  in writing  of an offer  made by the  corporation,  as  provided  in
paragraph  (g),  but  in no  case  later  than  sixty  days  from  the  date  of
consummation  of the corporate  action except that if the  corporation  fails to
make a timely offer,  as provided in paragraph  (g), the time for  withdrawing a
notice of election  shall be extended until sixty days from the date an offer is
made.  Upon  expiration of such time,  withdrawal of a notice of election  shall
require  the  written  consent  of the  corporation.  In order to be  effective,
withdrawal  of a notice of  election  must be  accompanied  by the return to the
corporation  of any  advance  payment  made to the  shareholder  as  provided in
paragraph (c,). If a notice of election is withdrawn, or the corporate action is
rescinded,  or a court shall  determine that the  shareholder is not entitled to
receive  payment for his shares,  or the  shareholder  shall  otherwise lose his
dissenter's  rights,  he shall not have the  right to  receive  payment  for his
shares and he shall be reinstated  to all his rights as a shareholder  as of the
consummation  of the  corporate  action,  including any  intervening  preemptive
rights  and  the  right  to  payment  of  any  intervening   dividend  or  other
distribution  or,  if any such  rights  have  expired  or any such  dividend  or
distribution  other  than in cash has been  completed  in lieu  thereof,  at the
election of the corporation, the fair value thereof in cash as determined by the
board as of the time of such  expiration or  completion,  but without  prejudice
otherwise to any corporate proceedings that may have been taken in the interim.

                  (f) At the time of filing the notice of election to dissent or
within  one  month   thereafter  the   shareholder  of  shares   represented  by
certificates  shall  submit  the  certificates  representing  his  shares to the
corporation,  or to its transfer agent, which shall forthwith note conspicuously
thereon  that a  notice  of  election  has  been  filed  and  shall  return  the
certificates  to the  shareholder  or other  person  who  submitted  them on his
behalf.  Any  shareholder  of shares  represented by  certificates  who fails to
submit his  certificates  for such notation as herein  specified  shall,  at the
option of the corporation  exercised by written notice to him within  forty-five
days from the date of filing of such notice of  election  to  dissent,  lose his
dissenter's rights unless a court, for good cause shown, shall otherwise direct.
Upon transfer of certificate bearing such notation,  each new certificate issued
therefor  shall bear a similar  notation  together with the name of the original
dissenting  holder of the shares and a transferee shall acquire no rights in the
corporation  except those which the original  dissenting  shareholder had at the
time of the transfer.

                  (g) Within  fifteen  days after the  expiration  of the period
within which  shareholder,,  may file their  notices of election to dissent,  or
within  fifteen  days  after  the  propose(  corporate  action  is  consummated.
whichever is later (but in no case later than ninety days from the shareholders'
authorization   date),   the  corporation  or,  in  the  case  of  a  merger  or
consolidation,  the surviving or new corporation,  shall make a written offer by
registered mail to each shareholder who has filed such notice of election to pay
for his shares at a specified price which the corporation  considers to be their
fair value.  Such offer shall be  accompanied  by a statement  setting forth the
aggregate  number of shares with respect to which notices of election to dissent
have been  received and the aggregate  number of holders of such shares.  If the
corporate action has been  consummated,  such offer shall also be accompanied by
(1) advance payment to each such  shareholder who has submitted the certificates
representing his shares to the corporation,  as provided in paragraph (f), of an
amount  equal to eighty  percent of the amount of such offer,  or (2) as to each
shareholder who has not yet submitted his  certificates a statement that advance
payment to him of an amount equal to eighty  percent of the amount of such offer
shall be made by the corporation  promptly upon submission of his  certificates.
If the corporate  action has not been  consummated  at the time of the making of
the offer, such advance payment or statement as to advance payment shall be sent
to  each  shareholder  entitled  thereto  forthwith  upon  consummation  of  the
corporate action. Every advance payment or statement as to advance payment shall
include advice to the  shareholder to the effect that acceptance of such payment
does not constitute a waiver of any dissenters'  rights. If the corporate action
has not been  consummated upon the expiration of the ninety day period after the
shareholders'  authorization  date,  the  offer  may  be  conditioned  upon  the
consummation  of such  action.  Such  offer  shall be made at the same price per
share to all  dissenting  shareholders  of the same  class,  or if divided  into
series,  of the same series and shall be  accompanied  by a balance sheet of the
corporation  whose  shares  the  dissenting  shareholder  holds as of the latest
available date,  which shall not be earlier than twelve months before the making
of such offer, and a profit and loss statement or statements for not less than a
twelve  month  period  ended  on the  date  of such  balance  sheet  or,  if the
corporation was not in existence  throughout  such twelve month period,  for the
portion thereof during which it was in existence. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the  corporation  shall not be required to furnish a balance sheet or profit and
loss  statement or statements to any  shareholder  to whom such balance sheet or
profit and loss statement or statements  were  previously  furnished,  nor if in
connection with obtaining the shareholders'  authorization for or consent to the
proposed  corporate  action  the  shareholders  were  furnished  with a proxy or
information  statement,   which  included  financial  statements,   pursuant  to
Regulation  14A or Regulation  14C of the United States  Securities and Exchange
Commission.  If  within  thirty  days  after  the  making  of  such  offer,  the
corporation making the offer and any shareholder agree upon the price to be paid
for his  shares,  payment  therefor  shall be made  within  sixty days after the
making of such  offer or the  consummation  of the  proposed  corporate  action,
whichever is later,  upon the surrender of the  certificates for any such shares
represented by certificates.

                  (h) The  following  procedure  shall apply if the  corporation
fails to make such offer within such period of fifteen  days, or if it makes the
offer and any  dissenting  shareholder  or  shareholders  fail to agree  with it
within the period of thirty days  thereafter upon the price to be paid for their
shares:

                           (1) The corporation  shall,  within twenty days after
the expiration of whichever is applicable of the two
periods last mentioned.  institute a special  proceeding in the supreme court in
the  judicial  district  in which the  office of the  corporation  is located to
determine  the rights of  dissenting  shareholders  and to fix the fair value of
their shares.  If, in the case of merger or consolidation,  the surviving or new
corporation  is a foreign  corporation  without  an office in this  state,  such
proceeding  shall be  brought in the  county  where the  office of the  domestic
corporation, whose shares are to be valued, was located.

                           (2)  If  the  corporation  fails  to  institute  such
proceeding within such period of twenty days, any
dissenting  shareholder  may institute such  proceeding for the same purpose not
later than thirty days after the  expiration of such twenty day period.  If such
proceeding  is not  instituted  within such thirty day period,  all  dissenter's
rights  shall be lost  unless the Supreme  court,  for good cause  shown,  shall
otherwise direct.

                           (3) All dissenting shareholders, excepting those who,
as provided in paragraph (g), have agreed with the
corporation upon the price to be paid for their shares, shall be made parties to
such  proceeding,  which shall have the effect of an action quasi in rem against
their  shares.  The  corporation  shall  serve  a copy of the  petition  in such
proceeding upon each  dissenting  shareholder who is a resident of this state in
the  manner  provided  by law  for the  service  of a  summons,  and  upon  each
nonresident dissenting shareholder either by registered mail and publication, or
in such other manner as is permitted by law. The jurisdiction of the court shall
be plenary and exclusive.

                           (4) The court shall determine whether each dissenting
shareholder, as to whom the corporation requests the
court to make such determination, is entitled to receive payment for his shares.
If the corporation does not request any such determination or if the court finds
that any  dissenting  shareholder  is so entitled,  it shall  proceed to fix the
value of the shares, which, for the purposes of this section,  shall be the fair
value  as of the  close  of  business  on the  day  prior  to the  shareholders'
authorization  date.  In fixing the fair value of the  shares,  the court  shall
consider the nature of the transaction giving rise to the shareholder's right to
receive  payment  for  shares  and  its  effects  on  the  corporation  and  its
shareholders, the concepts and methods then customary in the relevant securities
and  financial  markets for  determining  fair value of shares of a  corporation
engaging in a similar  transaction under comparable  circumstances and all other
relevant factors. The court shall determine the fair value of the shares without
a jury and without referral to an appraiser or referee.  Upon application by the
corporation or by any shareholder  who is a party to the  proceeding,  the court
may, in its discretion,  permit pretrial disclosure,  including, but not limited
to,  disclosure of any expert's reports relating to the fair value of the shares
whether  or  not  intended  for  use  at  the  trial  in  the   proceeding   and
notwithstanding  subdivision  (d) of section 3101 of the civil  practice law and
rules.

                           (5)  The  final  order  in the  proceeding  shall  be
entered against the corporation in favor of each dissenting shareholder who is a
party to the proceeding  and is entitled  thereto for the value of his shares so
determined.

                           (6) The final order shall  include an  allowance  for
interest  at such rate as the  court  finds to be  equitable,  from the date the
corporate action was consummated to the date of payment. In determining the rate
of interest,  the court shall consider all relevant factors,  including the rate
of interest which the  corporation  would have had to pay to borrow money during
the  pendency  of the  proceeding.  If the court  finds that the  refusal of any
shareholder  to  accept  the  corporate  offer of  payment  for his  shares  was
arbitrary,  vexatious  or  otherwise  not in good faith,  no  interest  shall be
allowed to him.

                           (7) Each party to such proceeding  shall bear its own
costs and expenses, including the fees and expenses
of its counsel and of any experts employed by it. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the court may, in its  discretion,  apportion  and assess all or any part of the
costs,  expenses and fees incurred by the corporation  against any or all of the
dissenting  shareholders  who are parties to the  proceeding,  including any who
have  withdrawn  their notices of election as provided in paragraph  (e), if the
court  finds that their  refusal to accept the  corporate  offer was  arbitrary,
vexatious  or  otherwise  not in good faith.  The court may, in its  discretion,
apportion and assess all or any part of the costs, expenses and fees incurred by
any or all of the  dissenting  shareholders  who are  parties to the  proceeding
against the  corporation if the court finds any of the  following:  (A) that the
fair value of the shares as determined  materially  exceeds the amount which the
corporation  offered to pay; (B) that no offer or required  advance  payment was
made by the  corporation;  (C) that the  corporation  failed  to  institute  the
special proceeding within the period specified therefor;  or (D) that the action
of the corporation in complying with its obligations as provided in this section
was  arbitrary,  vexatious  or  otherwise  not in  good  faith.  In  making  any
determination  as  Provided  in clause (A),  the court may  consider  the dollar
amount  or the  percentage,  or both,  b which the fair  value of the  shares as
determined exceeds the corporate offer.

                           (8) Within  sixty days after final  determination  of
the proceeding, the corporation s pay to each
dissenting  shareholder  the  amount  found to be due  him,  upon  surrender  of
certificate for any such shares represented by certificates.

                  (i) Shares acquired by the corporation upon the payment of the
agreed  value there or of the amount due under the final  order,  as provided in
this  section,  shall  become  treasury  shares or be,  cancelled as provided in
section  515  (Reacquired  shares),   except  that,  in  case  of  a  merger  or
consolidation,  they  may  be  held  and  disposed  of  as  the  plan  of  me or
consolidation may otherwise provide.

                  (j) No payment shall be made to a dissenting shareholder under
this  section at a time when the  corporation  is insolvent or when such payment
would make it insolvent. In such event, the dissenting shareholder shall, at his
option:

                           (1) Withdraw  his notice of election,  which shall in
such event be deemed withdrawn with the written
consent of the corporation; or

                           (2) Retain   his  status as a  claimant  against  the
corporation and, if it is liquidated, subordinated to the rights of creditors of
the corporation,  but have rights superior to the  non-dissenting  shareholders,
and if it is not liquidated, retain his right to be paid for shares, which right
the corporation  shall be obliged to satisfy when the  restrictions of paragraph
do not apply.

                           (3) The  dissenting  shareholder  shall exercise such
option  under  subparagraph  (1)  or  (2)  by  written  notice  filed  with  the
corporation  within thirty days after the corporation h given him written notice
that  payment  for his shares  cannot be made  because of  restrictions  of this
paragraph. If the dissenting shareholder fails to exercise such option provided,
the corporation  shall exercise the option by written notice given to him within
twenty days after the expiration of such period of thirty days.

                  (k) The  enforcement  by a shareholder of his right to receive
payment  for  his  shares  in the  manner  provided  herein  shall  exclude  the
enforcement by such shareholder of an other right to which he might otherwise be
entitled by virtue of share ownership,  except as provided in paragraph (e), and
except that this  section  shall not exclude  the right of such  shareholder  to
bring or maintain an appropriate action to obtain relief on the ground that such
corporate action shall be or is unlawful or fraudulent as to him.

                  (l) Except as otherwise  expressly  provided in this  section,
any notice to be given by a  corporation  to a  shareholder  under this  section
shall be given in the manner  provided  in section  605  (Notice of  meetings of
shareholders).

                  (m) This  section  shall  not  apply to  foreign  corporations
except  as   provided  in   subparagraph   (e)(2)  of  section  907  (Merger  or
consolidation of domestic and foreign corporations) (Last amended by Ch. 117, L.
`86, eff. 9-1-86.)


<PAGE>


Exhibit Number  Description of Exhibit
- --------------  ----------------------------------------------------------------
   1*           Common Stock Purchase Warrant Certificate issued to RGC
                International Investors, LDC dated August 31, 1998 (Series C).
   2*           Common Stock Purchase Warrant Certificate issued to Shoreline 
                Pacific Equity, Ltd. dated August 31, 1998 (Series C).
   3*           Common Stock Purchase Warrant Certificate issued to Steven M. 
                Lamar dated August 31, 1998 (Series C).
   4*           Securities Purchase Agreement by and among the Company and the
                Buyers (as defined therein), dated as of August 31, 1998 
                (Series C and Series D).
   5*           Registration Rights Agreement by and among the Company and the
                Initial Investors (as defined therein) dated as of August 31,
                1998 (Series C and Series D).
   6*           Escrow Agreement by and among the Company, the Buyers (as 
                defined therein), Shoreline Pacific Institutional Finance and
                the Escrow Holder (as defined therein), dated as of August 31,
                1998 (Series C).
   7*           Common Stock Purchase Warrant Certificate issued to Shoreline 
                Pacific Equity, Ltd. dated August 31, 1998 (Series D).
   8*           Common Stock Purchase Warrant  Certificate issued to Steven M.
                Lamar dated August 31, 1998 (Series D). 
   9**          Securities  Purchase  Agreement by and among the Company and the
                Buyers (as defined therein), dated as of May 28, 1998 (Series B)
  10**          Registration Rights Agreement by and among the Company and the
                Initial Investors (as defined therein), dated as of May 28, 1998
                (Series B).
  11**          Escrow  Agreement by and among the Buyers (as defined  therein),
                Shoreline  Pacific  Institutional  Finance and the Escrow Holder
                (as defined therein), dated as of May 28, 1998 (Series D).
  12**          Common Stock Purchase Warrant Certificate issued to purchasers 
                of the Series B Preferred Stock, dated May 28, 1998.
  13**          Common Stock Purchase Warrant Certificate issued to assignees of
                Shoreline Pacific Institutional Finance, dated May 28, 1998 
                (Series B).
  14*           List of recipients of Common Stock Purchase Warrants issued in  
                connection with Series B Preferred Stock transaction.
  15***         Securities  Purchase  Agreement by and among the Company and the
                Buyers (as  defined  therein),  dated as of  December  31,  1997
                (Series A).
  16***         Registration  Rights  Agreement by and among the Company and the
                Initial Investors (as defined therein), dated as of December 31,
                1997 (Series A).
  17***         Escrow  Agreement by and among the Buyers (as defined  therein),
                Shoreline Pacific  Institutional  Finances and the Escrow Holder
                (as defined therein), dated as of December 31, 1997 (Series A).
  18***         Common Stock Purchase Warrant  Certificate  issued to purchasers
                of the Series A Preferred Stock, dated December 31, 1997.
  19***         Common Stock Purchase Warrant Certificate issued to assignees of
                Shoreline Pacific Institutional Finance, dated December 31, 1997
                (Series A).
  20*           List of recipients of Common Stock Purchase Warrants issued in 
                connection with Series A Preferred Stock transaction.
  21*           Action by Written Consent of the Sole Holder of the Series E 
                Convertible Preferred Stock of SoftNet Systems, Inc.
- ---------------
*          Filed as an exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on 
           Form S-3 (No. 333-65593)
**         Filed as an exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on
           Form S-3 (No. 333-57337)
***        Filed as an exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on
           Form S-3 (No. 333-45335)

<PAGE>

                              SOFTNET SYSTEMS, INC.
                                      PROXY
                Annual Meeting of Stockholders, February __, 1998

         This  Proxy is  Solicited  on  Behalf  of the  Board of  Directors  The
undersigned hereby appoints Dr. Lawrence B. Brilliant, Steven M. Harris and Mark
A. Phillips,  and each of them,  attorneys and proxies of the undersigned,  with
full  power  of  substitution,  and  hereby  authorizes  them to  represent  the
undersigned  at the Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  (the "Annual  Meeting") of
SoftNet  Systems,  Inc. to be held on February __, 1998 and at any  adjournments
thereof,  and to vote, as designated below, all of the shares of Common Stock of
the  Company  held of record  by the  undersigned  on  _______,  1998  which the
undersigned  is entitled  to vote,  either on his own behalf or on behalf of any
entity or entities,  with the same force and effect as the undersigned  might or
could do if personally present thereat:


1.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To approve the Company's 
                                            reincorporation in Delaware
2.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To increase the number of 
                                            authorized shares of capital stock
3.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To approve the listing of the 
                                            Company's Common Stock on the
                                            Nasdaq Stock Market
4.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To approve the adoption of the 
                                            Company's 1998 Stock
                                            Incentive Plan under which
                                            2,850,668 shares of Common Stock
                                            have been reserved for issuance
5.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To authorize and approve the 
                                            issuance of the common stock
                                            underlying the Company's
                                            Convertible Preferred Stock and
                                            Warrants to purchase common
                                            stock, which in the aggregate
                                            would represent 20% or more of
                                            the outstanding shares of Common
                                            Stock
6.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To approve the sale of the Company's
                                            non-Internet related subsidiaries
7.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To elect directors
8.   FOR ____   AGAINST ____   ABSTAIN ____ To appoint PricewaterhouseCoopers 
                                            LLP as independent auditors of the
                                            Company for the fiscal year ending
                                            September 30, 1999

                  The shares  covered by this proxy will be voted in  accordance
with the undersigned's  instruction with respect to any matter in which a choice
is specified.  Unless a contrary  instruction  is indicated,  this proxy will be
voted in favor of each  proposals,  and will be voted at the  discretion  of the
proxy holders on such other matters as may come before the Annual Meeting.

                  Each of the proxies or their  substitutes  as shall be present
and acting at the Annual  Meeting  shall have and may exercise all of the powers
of all of said proxies hereunder.

           Please print the name(s) appearing on each certificate over
                        which you have voting authority:


                 ----------------------------------------------
                           [Print Name on Certificate]


                             Please sign your name:

                 ----------------------------------------------
                             [Authorized Signature]


                 ----------------------------------------------
                              [Date of Signature]






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