Digital Preservation Matters - Past

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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Preserving Email DPC Technology Watch Report released.

Preserving Email DPC Technology Watch Report released. Neil Beagrie.  Blog. News release. 17 Feb 2012.  
The 57 page Preserving Email technology watch report gives practical advice on how to ensure that  email remains accessible.   "Users normally shoulder the ultimate responsibility for managing and preserving their own email.  This exposes important records to needless risks and is counterproductive in many cases." The three basic steps which institutions should undertake:
  1. Define policies, including institutional commitment, specific actions to take, and end-user expectations, responsibilities and rights regarding the email archives
  2. choosing appropriate tools to work with email in an environment where users have adequate storage space and without auto-deletion settings
  3. implementing them in the light of local environmental factors and available resources.
 The report suggests five different preservation strategies with possible tools (such as Aid4Mail and Emailchemy) or methods (co-managing archive folders) in some of the cases, for the institution and individuals.
  1. The ‘sweeping up crumbs’ or whole-account approach refers to harvesting email found on a user’s computer or account. 
  2. The ‘nurturing and harvesting’ approach, helping email users ensure that critical records are retained in system-neutral formats, then using email migration software to capture and preserve records either as they are created or at the end of a user’s lifetime. An example is providing users a designated ‘archives’ box.
  3. The ‘capturing carbon’ or whole system approach implements email archiving software to capture an entire email ecosystem or a portion of that ecosystem to an external email storage environment.
  4. The ‘tagging and bagging’ or message-by-message approach, existing electronic record management systems, but which may not be effective.
  5. The Personal Archives Service approach, which would offer services such as Carbonite or CrashPlan.

Unless we make the preservation of trusted email records a systematic part of our everyday operations, many important records will be lost. They cite some examples, such as the 22 million emails from the Executive Office of the President of the United States surrounding the Gulf War that we lost when servers were replaced. 
Digital Preservation Matters.



Posted by Chris Erickson at 9:44 PM
Labels: digital preservation, email archiving, policies, preservation tools

2 comments:

  1. Email archiving applianceNovember 14, 2012 at 6:15 AM

    I think that email archiving solution is secure solution. Email archiving is future same as cloud computing. Good tips!

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  2. Maricar GomezNovember 28, 2012 at 12:48 AM

    This is actually a great tips.. but maybe the important one is that the reliabilty and secureness of storage..

    email archiving solution 

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