Dec 19, 2007, News Report
Chief Information Officers (CIOs) and IT managers alarmed by recent stories about deletion of data by government agencies and financial services organizations are beginning to ask pointed questions about their own e-mail archiving solutions. According to e-mail compliance experts at Forensic & Compliance Systems (FSS), those questions are often well-founded.
"We have heard CIOs and IT managers ask, 'Are our e-mail systems compliant? Will they provide the forensic capabilities required for court submission? Are our e-mail policies creating compliance nightmares?'" says FSS CIO Andy Whitaker. "That last question is often a large cause for their alarm. Many e-mail archiving solutions claim to be compliant. But compliant to what? The answer very much depends on where you are located and in which industry segment you operate."
Whitaker warns that there are often numerous national legal regulations or industry requirements for organizations to follow in order to be truly compliant when archiving e-mail.
"Beware of so-called policy-based e-mail archive solutions," warns Whitaker. "Unless these cover everyone within an organization, without exception, they're not providing true compliance. e-mails from everyone who corresponds with an organization, inside or outside, often must be retained for the maximum length of time stipulated in any relevant legal or industry regulation."
He recommends that CIOs and IT managers consider three main features when assessing an e-mail compliant product for use within their organizations:
These considerations form the basis of FSS's Cryoserver Seven Point Expert Scorecard for Choosing an e-mail Archiving System:
"If the e-mail archiving compliance solution that a Chief Information Officer or IT manager is evaluating fails any of these seven basic points, he or she needs to look elsewhere," said Whitaker.
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