Sophia Technologies Blog

October 27, 2008

Why are we still using PST?

PST files create major problems for companies including the following:

  • They allow users to retain email longer than companies need or want to keep email for.
  • When a company has an e-Discovery request or other type of search, because of PSTs, they often have to spend a considerable amount of time and money copying data from employee desktops and laptops and searching through a mountain of information.
  • Employees can intentionally (leaving the company) or accidentally (leaving a laptop in the airport) give up the valuable company knowledge in their email to competitors or hackers.
  • PST files are typically on PCs that aren’t backed up, exposing the employee and the company to lost information and productivity.
  • Many employees copy PST files to network hard drives to ensure they are backed up.  As such, GBs or TBs of redundant email (each PST in a company often contains many duplicate messages since many individuals may have received the same email) clog up shared drives.  Some companies estimate 25% – 60% of shared drive storage and backup comes from PST files.
  • In addition, every time a PST file is opened (whether modified or not), it “looks” like a changed file to incremental backup programs.  This means PST backup is highly redundant and inefficient.
  • Finally, users often spend considerable time managing PST files themselves.

So let’s get to the root of the issue?  Why do users create PST files?

At the heart of it, one of the fundamental reasons users love PSTs is that it allows them to get around the company mailbox limits often imposed in Microsoft Exchange to keep the email server efficient, fast and easy to backup.  Mailbox “quotas” attempt to solve the email storage problem but instead shift it to the “underground archives” sitting on employee PCs.

If employees instead had an unlimited email archive integrated into their email, controlled by company policies and fully-searchable, PST files become a great deal less relevant.
So to enforce your PST policies, start at the source by eliminating the need for PSTs altogether, get an email archiving solution. Download SophiaEA now clicking HERE.

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October 21, 2008

E-Mail Archiving Solutions – The basics

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — rajeevkistoo @ 2:17 am

Contrary to many people’s beliefs, email archiving is not a matter of turning the matter to the IT department – who will, in turn, either purchase or develop an in-house archival system for company use. Experts point out that successful email archiving involves teamwork and interaction between three departments: Legal, Human Resources Development (HRD) and IT.

The legal department’s task is to establish the framework and parameters of the archiving system – which records need to be archived and for how long, and the terms and conditions that govern the stored records (e.g., who has access, what are procedures to be followed, etc.).

The IT department’s task is setting up the infrastructure (including hardware and software support), systems and procedures as well as recruiting and training personnel to oversee the system.

The HRD department’s task, on the other hand, involves training and educating people in the needs, requirements and procedures for email archiving – what to archive, how often it should be done, the systems involved, and so on.

At the end of the line come the systems – as noted, hardware (including the appropriate storage media), software programs, backup systems and procedures, disaster management and so on.

Email archiving is an essential business practice that is often . The legal and financial penalties in not establishing a properly functional email archiving system can be substantial.

Sophia Email Archiver 2.0 has essentially been designed to meet the needs of an email archiving requirement from a legal perspective and systems perspective. Download your trial version now, click Here

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October 18, 2008

Think E-Mail Archiving

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — rajeevkistoo @ 11:48 pm

Legally speaking, laws governing records keeping and management have been around for years, with specific industries (e.g., lawyers, financial and credit institutions, medical facilities, etc.) being required to keep records for periods lasting from three to five years or more. The introduction and subsequent growth of internet-based communications has not changed the legal framework and requirements for these, but has irreversibly increased the need of email archiving systems.

At the same time, US courts have issued guidelines on what is called ‘e-discovery’ or exchanging information using electronic means in legal proceedings. The American Bar Association has, in turn, warned lawyers that e-discovery apparently covers all means of electronic communications – including storage media, personal computers, laptops, PDAs, mobile phones, and so on.

Aside from these sources of information, companies must be prepared to show that their records have not been tampered with. In the same way, they should be able to prove – if needed – that their opponent’s records have been tampered with.

The sheer volume of data that email systems generate compounds the problem. Even removal of spam leaves a significant volume of data left over – which have to be filed, stored and maintained in a form and manner that is easy to retrieve and track.

The legal requirements straddle into practical issues. Tracing an email trail (for litigation purposes, for example) often results in time spent and people ‘dedicated’ to a single task – searching through storage media, checking and counter-checking veracity and accuracy of data, and in some cases attempting recovery of information that has been deleted – all under the pressure of heavy penalties in the event of failure. Sophia Email Archiver has been designed to meet above requirements, download your trial today by clicking Here.

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