Get the real story via our monthly newsletter

Search

    2
    0

rss

Send to a colleague

Home > Commentary > Trends Archive > Dining at the intersection of Search and Retention

Browse TrendWatch Blog

Recent Blog Entries

The Complete Archive

Trends by Vendor


TrendWatch by Channel

Web Content Management Trends

Enterprise Portals Trends

ECM Trends

Web Analytics Trends

Enterprise Search Trends

SharePoint Trends

Digital & Media Asset Management Trends

XML & Component Content Management Trends

E-mail Archiving & Management Trends


Report Excerpt

The E-mail Archiving & Management Report 2008 looks at... Moitoring Compliance Suite

"The Supervision Module in particular allows for an unusually wide set of monitoring options, with added workflow services to prioritize remediation."

(p. 97)

More about The E-mail Archiving & Management Report 2008

Our customers say

"This report is so thorough in providing an approach to EAM that you need only add the knowledge specific to your enterprise to complete the picture...
- - Philip M. Howard, Principal Consultant,
pmh Interworks - Canada

NEW at CMS Watch

The ECM Suites Report 2009 The ECM Suites Report 2009: This report evaluates 30 ECM offerings... Read more
ECM Education ECM Technology Online Courses: Alan Pelz-Sharpe instructs students on ECM Technology...Read more
jboye08 Join us in Denmark at jboye08: On November 4, CMS Watch will teach tutorials on Web Content Management, Enterprise Social Software, and SharePoint... Read more

 

TrendWatch Blog

Dining at the intersection of Search and Retention

22-May-2008

Lawyers were well represented (you might say) at this year's Enterprise Search Summit in New York. At times, ESS felt more like an e-discovery conference with analytics and social-computing side-tracks rather than a search conference featuring a few e-discovery sessions.

Based on what I saw at the Search Summit, there seems to be a renewed awareness, at ever-higher levels in the corporate responsibility chain, that in a litigious business environment "enterprise search" is not just a knowledge-management tactic or a productivity aid, but a survival imperative. You will be sued some day. (It's not a matter of "if," but when.) During the discovery phase of the suit, you're going to provide (and also receive from the other side) bewilderingly immense amounts of data. Without good search technology, sifting through the data isn't just tedious but nightmarishly expensive.

I didn't get a chance to attend any e-discovery sessions at the Search Summit. It didn't matter. At lunch, I happened to sit down next to litigation technology consultant (and ESS presenter) Jeff Flax. We had an illuminating chat about search and discovery in the context of records retention.

Flax noted that many companies that have records retention policies aren't following them. He sees a "pack rat" syndrome: a tendency to let expired records remain in the morgue past the "save-till" date. The problem with this is that files that have been declared obsolete or marked for disposition, but have not yet been physically destroyed, are still subject to subpoena. "A good lawyer will ask for expired documents during discovery," Flax notes.

Lawyers are also demanding data in its "native state": Not text dumps or PDFs or other derivative forms of the data, but the data as it actually exists. "If I'm a lawyer and I'm requesting someone's e-mails on a certain subject," says Flax, "I don't want the e-mails as text files, I want the original e-mail archive in binary form so I can pick apart the bits and get at all the header and footer and other information in context."

Sometimes physical media must be handed over in discovery so that deleted files can be detected and recovered. "I've seen cases where browser search queries from many years back, supposedly no longer on disk, have been recovered forensically," Flax told me. "And then certain keyword clumps are detected, and those query patterns can become admissible in court."

It turns out that the data in a search index (the index built by a search engine) can often be used to reconstruct a document even after the document itself has been irretrievably lost. Takeaway: A document can't be considered fully destroyed until you've destroyed its search-index data as well. (I wonder how many retention policies take this into account? Doubtless very few.)

If you're concerned about e-mail retention (and if you're not, you should be), you might want to look into our latest offering: The E-mail Archiving & Management Report 2008.You'll find that the report divides vendors (roughly) along three lines: policy-centric, archive-centric, and SaaS-based. (You can see a free sample here.)

My advice? Never pass up a chance to have lunch with a litigation technology expert. You'll be inundated with food for thought.

- Submitted by: Kas Thomas, Analyst

All E-mail Channel Trends

Join the conversation

Digg This! Search Technorati Tag it on Del.icio.us



Get a Free Sample

Wondering about CMS Watch research? Sign up to receive free samples of any of our products.




What we do

CMS Watch™ evaluates content-oriented technologies, publishing head-to-head comparative reviews of leading solutions. What makes us special?

  • Our critical analysis exposes product weaknesses as well as strengths
  • We deliver unrivaled technical depth and comprehensive project advice
  • Our research is led by international topic experts
  • We only work for buyers -- never for vendors

Contact us

CMS Watch

info@cmswatch.com

18113 Town Center Drive, Ste 217

Olney, MD USA 20832

1 800 325 6190 (customer service)

+1 617 763 5336 (int'l customer service)

Fax: +1 214 242 3048