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Without email archiving, email likely exists on some combination of backup tapes and on end users’ local workstations. If a specific email needs to be found for an internal investigation or in response to litigation, it can take weeks to find and costs a great deal. With today’s legal discovery rules (see FRCP: http://www.uscourts.gov/rules/EDiscovery_w_Notes.pdf) and compliance legislations, it has become necessary for IT departments to centrally manage and archive their organization’s email, so email can be searched and found in minutes; not days or weeks.
Without email archiving, email likely exists on some combination of backup tapes and on end users’ local workstations. If a specific email needs to be found for an internal investigation or in response to litigation, it can take weeks to find and costs a great deal. With today’s legal discovery rules (see FRCP: http://www.uscourts.gov/rules/EDiscovery_w_Notes.pdf) and compliance legislations, it has become necessary for IT departments to centrally manage and archive their organization’s email, so email can be searched and found in minutes; not days or weeks.

To implement a solid email archiving solution, companies must search for the appropriate vendor. There are a small number of vendor in the market that have email archiving as a stand alone product or combined with their other offerings. Here is a short list:

[http://www.clearwellsystems.com Clearwell Systems Inc.]<br />
[http://www.emc.com EMC Corp. NYSE: EMC]<br />
[http://www.fortiva.com Fortiva Inc.]<br />
[http://www.gfi.com GFI Software Ltd.]<br />
[http://www.hp.com Hewlett-Packard Co.]<br />
[http://www.ibm.com IBM Corp. NYSE: IBM ] <br />
[http://www.intradyn.com Intradyn Inc. ]<br />
[http://www.ironmountain.com Iron Mountain Inc. NYSE: IRM]<br />
[http://www.mimosa.com Mimosa Systems Inc.]<br />
[http://www.quest.com Quest Software Inc.]<br />
[http://www.stepx.com Step-X Inc.]<br />
[http://www.symantec.com Symantec Corp. Nasdaq: SYMC ]<br />
[http://www.waterfordtechnologies.com Waterford Technologies Inc. ]<br />




[[Category:E-mail]]
[[Category:E-mail]]

Revision as of 19:57, 10 December 2007


Email archiving is a stand-alone IT application that works with an email server to help manage an organization’s email messages. It captures and preserves all email traffic flowing into and out of the email server so it can be accessed quickly at a later date from a centrally managed location. When the need arises to search historical email for internal investigations or for a court-ordered legal discovery, organizations can search thousands of email records in seconds using search tools embedded in the email archiving system.

There are email archiving applications to support email messaging systems, and they can be installed in-house or can perform as a hosted service. In addition to email and attachments, some email archiving applications also archive all aspects of a mailbox including public folders, offline PST files, calendars, contacts, notes, and associated metadata and context. Email archiving can also enable applications for end-user search, data protection, disaster recovery, eDiscovery, and compliance supervision.

Email archiving applications capture email content on magnetic disk storage in one of two methods. One method is to capture email directly from the email application itself. (e.g. Microsoft Exchange, IBM Notes, Novell GroupWise). The alternative method captures email content during transport via an agent installed at network gateway.

There are multiple reasons why organizations implement email archiving:

• To enable email users who send and receive hundreds of email messages each day to have unlimited mailbox capacity and fingertip access to years’ worth of email

• To offload data from the production email server for increased performance and storage efficiency while preserving access to end users

• To meet litigation, regulatory, and/or business records retention requirements by enabling compliance and legal officers to easily search email stored in the archive

Email archiving solutions improve email server performance and storage efficiency by removing email and attachments from the messaging server based on administrator defined policies. Archived email and attachments remain accessible to end users via the existing email client applications.

For legal discovery, email archiving solutions will lower overall risk of spoliation and greatly speed up the discovery function because of their message indexing, audit capabilities, deduplication and protection of all email messages stored in the archive. For litigation support, email can be retrieved quickly and a history of the email exists to prove its authenticity for chain of custody. For compliance support, email records are stored in the archive according to administrator defined retention policies. When retention periods expire, email is automatically deleted by the archiving application.

Without email archiving, email likely exists on some combination of backup tapes and on end users’ local workstations. If a specific email needs to be found for an internal investigation or in response to litigation, it can take weeks to find and costs a great deal. With today’s legal discovery rules (see FRCP: http://www.uscourts.gov/rules/EDiscovery_w_Notes.pdf) and compliance legislations, it has become necessary for IT departments to centrally manage and archive their organization’s email, so email can be searched and found in minutes; not days or weeks.

To implement a solid email archiving solution, companies must search for the appropriate vendor. There are a small number of vendor in the market that have email archiving as a stand alone product or combined with their other offerings. Here is a short list:

Clearwell Systems Inc.
EMC Corp. NYSE: EMC
Fortiva Inc.
GFI Software Ltd.
Hewlett-Packard Co.
IBM Corp. NYSE: IBM
Intradyn Inc.
Iron Mountain Inc. NYSE: IRM
Mimosa Systems Inc.
Quest Software Inc.
Step-X Inc.
Symantec Corp. Nasdaq: SYMC
Waterford Technologies Inc.