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It’s Time to Take Email Archiving & Security Seriously

It’s Time to Take Email Archiving & Security Seriously

With email having quietly matured into one of today’s most mission critical applications, could it be time to start taking its management, maintenance, and security rather more seriously?

As cultural phenomena go, the story of email’s emergence as the world’s undisputed champion of personal and business communication is about as impressive as any. It’s hard to believe, for instance, that there was a time not all that long ago, when deploying email was still considered a pretty big deal; when email meant specialist employee training; when half a dozen messages a day was a lot; when only the most senior management in a business could expect their own dedicated email accounts. How times change. Driven by all manner of market factors – server, storage, and software costs falling, the rise of always-on connectivity, teleworking, webmail, and mobile email to name just a handful – a robust, reliable, secure email solution is now nothing short of absolutely business critical. Indeed, issues such as email management, archiving, storage, and security now affect – or should affect – every company from SME to Enterprise, says Neil Hammerton, former CEO and founder of Email Systems, and currently VP of SaaS Development at Webroot. There are many drivers for this, he says. The need for information to be easily accessible where and whenever it’s required; Sarbanes Oxley and Basel II, which are driving archiving from a regulatory compliance perspective and which, in turn, are having a filterdown effect to businesses that don’t necessarily need to be compliant, but wish to employ best practice.

The threat of data loss is a further key factor, with industry reports indicating that 85% or more of a company’s intellectual property now passes through its email, according to Hammerton. “Businesses are conducting more and more legal transactions including quotes, orders, confirmations, and agreements via email”, confirms Duncan Ash, EMEA Business Development Manager with Sybase. “To protect both the organisation and its customers, these emails have to meet stringent statutory requirements governing document authenticity, confidentiality, and availability.”

Worryingly though, it appears that a disturbingly low number of UK businesses can be confident as regards the integrity of their email systems currently. In a recent study conducted by Vanson Bourne on behalf of Forensic & Compliance Systems (FCS), nearly half the businesses surveyed (44%) couldn’t prove email hadn’t been changed or tampered with, and more than a third (35%) were unsure whether any changes had taken place or not; results that suggest that three in four UK businesses have millions of emails floating around their synapses that would enjoy no legal standing. It uncovers a worrying reality, said Ralph Harvey, CEO at FCS. Specifically that many firms simply don’t “understand the consequences of not having a tighter control over their emails…” It’s a problem businesses simply have to address, counsels Steve Tongish, marketing director EMEA at Plasmon. “European regulations are now developing teeth. There have been recent court cases in both the UK and Germany where steep fines have been imposed when the process controlling records and the integrity of data was found to be inadequate.” This shift in risk exposure, he says, is forcing a rethink in digital archive requirements.

Malcolm Etchells is VP Europe for Waterford Technologies – a provider of solutions that allow the visualisation of email usage, data pattern analysis, and policy improvement and enforcement. He also bangs the compliance drum, citing several costly cases. “Some of the world’s largest, most IT savvy organisations – UBS Warburg, Fidelity, Morgan Stanley – have fallen foul”, he says. “(Businesses) must begin to think more proactively about how to archive, retrieve, and produce emails and related content in the event of a request from a regulatory or government body.” “… the issue is not storing the emails – that’s relatively easy – but finding and retrieving (them). Many organisations can show authorities the email in the system but can’t retrieve it. A well-publicised example is Morgan Stanley which has been fined repeatedly because of its inability to retrieve emails, with two fines of million and .5 million respectively.”

Ash warns, that there is a “conflict” between the need for strong record maintenance and data privacy law however. For example, he explains, confidential data mustn’t be kept in archives accessible to supervisory bodies, and personal emails cannot be stored without the agreement of both sender and recipient. There are pressing productivity concerns too. First, says Ash, if email is filed in an unstructured way, it’s impossible to fully exploit the information contained within it. Second, with knowledge increasingly available only within emails, companies need a way to store, access, and analyse this precious data efficiently. And a ‘save all emails’ strategy is clearly not the answer, he says. Separating what can and can’t be stored calls for sophisticated technologies. “Most specialised email archiving solutions are based on file-oriented data management systems. These are neither audit-secure, nor able to conduct a combined analysis of structured and unstructured information.”

Etchells cites further productivity concerns. According to the Office of National Statistics, he says, employees spend an average of two hours a day assessing, managing, and responding to email, which equates to 55 days a year or 11 working weeks for every email user. Translated into costs, the figures are alarming. Based on an organisation with 1,000 employees earning an average of £25,000p.a., for instance, each spending 1 minute per inbound email on an average of 40 messages per day, and a further 4 minutes creating and sending each of around 20 emails every day, the estimated cost to the business over the course of a year would be £7.5million. And that’s without the cost of email misuse and storage. So what’s the answer? Says Etchells: “Productivity is very much seen as an issue for the IT department but it cannot be held responsible for reducing the volume of email sent by, or within, an organisation. Even with adequate storage in place, creating a culture of efficient and responsible email use needs to be driven by the business, not IT.”

Urs Raas, Senior Product Manager at enterprise content management (ECM) software vendor, Tower Software offers some practical first steps. “First you need a system that can automatically move mail into an archive that uses cheap storage and is easy to maintain from a back-up and disaster recovery point of view. Second you need a system that allows the easy capture of emails into the context of the business process, alongside any other records documenting it. This is where email archiving meets compliance.”

Michael Brooke, Archive Manager Product specialist at Quest Software argues that a solution must also reduce the total volume of information stored, and not simply move the problem from a mail store to another media. “80% of email volume is attachment data and in most organisations the duplication rate of attachment data is close to 50%. I.e. 50% of the attachment storage used by a Mail server is duplicate data!” He cites easy administration and cultural ignorance as other growing issues. “IT staff are busy people and an archiving solution that requires significant management time becomes a liability.” “IT staff know that storage is not unlimited but the business doesn’t, so the IT manager is often left explaining to senior management why the legal department can’t have a 10GB mailbox. They aren’t interested in the back-ups and recovery, what if a disputed contract they sent 2 years ago is no longer retrievable?”

Implemented properly, says Etchells, the benefits can be huge. “Having an intelligent email management solution in place will provide (an) insight into email usage, especially the patterns that cause waste.” It can also help identify and eliminate non-work related email, he says, and even change the way employees create, manage, and think about email.

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Posted by admin on January 20th, 2011 :: Filed under Email Archiving
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Email Archivers Revisited

Email Archiving
by mangee

Email Archivers Revisited

Several years ago, email archiving was a hot topic as the new rules of discovery prompted everyone to look at how they would produce the appropriate email documents in the event of a lawsuit. Interest in archivers has resurfaced, but this time customers are looking at these devices as a solution to reducing out-of-control data stores.

 

The Challenge

Just as traditional data stores continue to grow, so do our email stores. It seems like an overnight explosion! But as anyone who has tried to implement an email store reduction policy knows, getting end-users to give up the items they have retained is almost impossible. Blame ENRON if you like, but people are more aware than ever that they may need to produce documentation to safeguard themselves. And in this day and age, who can blame them?

 

Enter the Email Archiver

More and more customers are contacting us to review the current email archiving solutions available for GroupWise. They want to use this technology as a way to reduce their data stores while giving end-users the comfort of knowing that they can retrieve a given message any time they need it. Here are a few important questions to ask as you consider the most popular GroupWise email archiving solutions on the market:

* How are you going to use the archiver? If you are simply going to use the archiver to be sure that all messages are archived per your data retention policies, any archiver compatible with GroupWise can achieve this goal – particularly if you don’t anticipate your end-users going back to the archive on a regular basis to look for messages.

* Does the archiving solution maintain the folder structure of the end-user’s mailbox? Not all archivers will do this. However, if your end-users will be looking for old messages on a regular basis, they will want to see the familiar folder structure they use every day. A search function to find the messages is not enough.

* Does the archiver support stubbing? Stubbing is a really important feature if you are looking to convince your end-users that archiving is a good thing. Stubbing allows the message subject and the first few lines of an email to appear in the end-user’s live mailbox. The result? For the end-user, nothing seems to have disappeared from their mailbox, even though technically the emails have been archived!

* Are you going to be pulling mail from traditional GroupWise archives? Again, not all archivers support this functionality. If you are not only trying to reduce your live message store but also the data stores of archive files, you need to be sure that you pick an archiver that can seamlessly accommodate this function. If not, you will have to unarchive the messages back to the live message store, archive them to the archiver, and then reduce the message store.

* How much data are you planning to archive? Make sure that your archiver is not undersized and that you can easily add storage if necessary. Many archivers support NAS, SAN, or Windows file share targets. How much space you need is completely dependent on the retention policies of your organization. A rule of thumb? Plan for growth, and then work on getting buy-in from the powers that be to prune this data at some point after the archiver is in place.

 

Conclusion

Email archivers are a great way to reduce live message stores without getting end-users to commit to completely getting rid of data they want to retain. And remember, reducing message stores makes for faster and more seamless migrations to new hardware or operating system platforms. For customers looking to perform NetWare to Linux migrations, this is a great place to start when planning your GroupWise server migrations.

 

 

© Copyright 2010, Uptime NetManagement, Inc.

Donna Moyer is Principal/Senior Network Consultant of Uptime NetManagement, Inc. (http://www.uptimenmi.com/). Uptime is a Novell Gold Solutions partner providing technology solutions, customized training, and consulting services. If you are interested in finding out exactly what Novell can do for your business, or are seeking to maximize the benefits from your current Novell systems, call us today at 610-621-1244!

 


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Posted by admin on January 20th, 2011 :: Filed under Email Archiving
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Email Archive Appliance

Email Archive Appliance

Today email system is the biggest tool in every business & this dependency of email system on business brings various problems. There are many issues which generally arise like: Storage, backups, problematic PST files, access to old emails and legal compliance. To solve and tackle these problems you need an Email Archiving Software & Email management solution.


Not only this, you need such a kind Email archiving solution which should be cost effective, easy to install and need very less administrative efforts.


So here is a solution of your problem. ITA Networks offers Email Archiving Software for Exchange Server 2000, 2003 & 2007. ITA Networks Email Archive easily manage the email processing system & its simple functions need very less administrative efforts to search and restore emails & archive mails.


• ITA Networks email archive works automatically & copy every single email that pass through Exchange server & stores all the mails in email server database.

• You could use stored emails from database anytime even when Exchange Server is offline due to problems or any reason.

• ITA Networks email archive moves essential & important data from mailboxes and stores the data Exchange Server database.

• ITA Networks email Archive extracts attachments form mails and save attachments separately & provides link for attachments in the links.

• ITA Networks email Archive provides security in case of critical e-mails getting lost due to PST files getting corrupted or e-mails getting lost for any reason. Backups take time to restore whereas Admin T own email Archive provides instant access to the e-mails, one more important reason for deploying ITA Networks email Archive on your network today.

• ITA Networks email Archive comes with built in SQL Database, so you do not have need to purchase additional software to store the emails.

• ITA Networks email Archive provides ability of search, view and restore emails to all users.

• ITA Networks email Archive connector system makes the process of archiving existing e-mails completely automated, easy, and effortless.


So with the help of ITA Networks email archive solution make your email system effortless and get good performance. To know more about of ITA Networks email Archive, visit this link:
Email Archive Appliance


For free Download visit here: Download Email Archive Appliance


If you need more information about ITA Networks email Archive software for Exchange Server 2000, 2003 & 2007 then you go through with these links:
Email Archive Appliance

sachin aggarwal offering ideas about Email Archive Appliance with the help of www.itanetworks.com

Proofpoint email archiving expert Andres Kohn discusses Proofpoint Archive. Explains how Proofpoint’s cloud-based email archiving solution simplifies eDiscovery, eases compliance, delivers high-speed email search and ensures complete security of your archived data.

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Posted by admin on October 10th, 2010 :: Filed under Email Archiving
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