Thursday, November 30, 2006

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act Has Forced Many Companies To Review Email Retention Policies.

Four years have passed since President Bush signed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and most analysts agree the law is working as larger companies are finally getting their accounting books in order.

The act was formulated to strengthen accounting oversight and corporate accountability. It did this by increasing accounting and auditor regulations, enhancing disclosure requirements, creating new federal laws and increasing penalties under existing federal laws.

An important aspect of the act focuses on the details of data security, retention and protection. So the question is, how does the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation impact email retention policies?

Surveys indicate that 93 percent of all business documents are created electronically and that has forced most corporations to address their retention policies. Businesses, small or large, can no longer consider email retention a non-priority.

Companies must develop a classification of data for off-site storage, such as an online storage service that encrypts and protect the data.

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act includes three provisions that deal with electronic documents, such as those communicated through emails. They include document alteration or destruction, mandatory document retention and obstruction of justice.

* In terms of document alteration or destruction, the Sarbanes-Oxley law states that people who knowingly alter, destroy, mutilate, falsify or conceal any document (electronic or paper) with the intent to impede proceedings involving federal agencies may be fined or imprisoned up to 20 years, or both. How does this impact email retention policies? If a company has an email retention policy in place, it must include a security plan. Only certain individuals should be given clearance to access the archived emails. A report with that person's name and purpose should be produced every time a certain email is accessed, and documentation of change to the existing document should be noted.

* The Sarbanes-Oxley provision of mandatory document retention forces businesses to keep records readily for review for a period of up to five years. The penalty for knowingly and willfully violating this provision imposes fines and a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, or both. How does this impact email retention policies? A business must generate a data-retention policy with archive history periods included. According to Sarbanes-Oxley, the time period for such retention should be at least five years. The emails should be classified by dates (months and years) to make it less complicated for auditors to access such information. If the emails are disorganized, the auditors may have to dig deeper and they might find improprieties.

* The obstruction of justice segment is similar to the document alteration provision under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, but it includes a statute that prohibits tampering with witnesses. The legislation states that acting or attempting to alter or destroy a record or other object "with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding" can be punishable with fines, imprisonment for up to 20 years, or both. How does this impact email retention policies? Again, any company that has a data retention policy must enforce a security plan such that data can be accessed by only the proper personnel. An online data backup service with strong encryption and user tracking helps eliminate the chance of human intervention with whatever email data has been stored. With certain managed backup services, online backups are performed automatically, so data is protected without manual intervention. Data moves through an existing network connection, using state-of-the-art data security including AES encryption to a secure remote data center.

Clearly, the document-retention regulations implemented by the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation sends a signal to businesses that they must institute a policy regarding their data and documents, including those transmitted through email. Businesses must realize that they can be held liable for retained and deleted electronic documents. The policies these businesses put in place should include an inventory of all the electronic hardware and software that can store emails (including cell phones and laptops), all locations and storage formats of archived emails, and all the methods that email documents can be transferred into and out of the company. The next step should include classification of such emails, and then a secure off-site online backup storage plan.

The days of simply keeping emails in a folder at each workstation are part of the past thanks to businesses that have put forth a solid data retention plan. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act has served as an effective means to help push the creation of such plans.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Data Disaster Recovery - Is It Really Necessary?

When people think of disasters, they mainly think of flooding or earthquakes. In the world of computer experts or people who makes their living using information technology, a disaster can be quite different and yet can have the same paralyzing effects. Like an aftershock to a major earthquake, losing one's data suddenly and without warning can leave many a computer technicians as well as users shocked and in awe. Never panic though, because disaster data recovery is a possibility and all that was once lost might be found with a high degree of reliability and an even higher percentage of probable retrieval.

Fire and flooding damage to a home can result in a complete mess. Most people might feel "ruined" because of the extreme equipment casualty that can be done to a home. Once it is established that there is no harm to any of the humans or pets in a building or office building, the healing of the equipment through disaster data recovery is ready to begin. A team of reliable computer technicians or experts is called in to begin work on your computer equipment or any other piece of equipment that was damaged by the fire.

Data backup and recovery is always precious. Many of the techniques the team of experts will use on the equipment are the same as the techniques used to rescue lost data from other machines under more normal circumstances, for example retrieving lost files from a damaged hard drive through a fire is much the same as simple finding lost files from a hard drive with a virus or other sort of infirmity. The important thing to keep in mind is that nobody gets hurt in the process of disaster data recovery.

Dangers from earthquake and fire

In more than one case, companies or individuals that lose important data to a fire or earthquake face a time of uncertainty that is unrivaled in the world of business conflicts and personal negativity. The pits of despair are now too familiar a home for those that have lost crucial pieces of data or information because of a strong type of calamity. Disaster data recovery can not only serve to restore the data to its original form but it can also restore relationships between them and, perhaps more profoundly, the human heart.

Data recovery experts are specialized in multiple areas of recovering data including, but not limited to: fire recovery, water damage recovery, and miscellaneous crash recovery that may have occurred with an act involving a sledgehammer and a frustrated information technology worker on his last day of work when the coffee was cold and the air conditioning was broken. Disaster data recovery will always have a place in the annals of office and/or personal lives and this author cannot be more grateful.

Monday, November 27, 2006

How To Recover Documents, Files, And Photos

We have all lost items while working on the computer by accidentally deleting them or someone lost them for you. This can be very frustrating, as some files are very important to our livelihood. Or maybe just important because they are personal. If you have looked everywhere, even the Recycle Bin, the following are hints and ideas to help you. It would be helpful to try them.

Let's start with lost files, which may still be on the disk. Don't give up hope. It is important to try all of you options. Use a tool such as File Recover or Uneraser to retrieve it. It is easy to use. Here are several ideas to get that file back intact. With a broken up disk and lost items from a file, the recovery software will quite likely not know what to do. The more simple the file, the better chance of recovery. For the most difficult recovery jobs, Partition Recovery is what we have found to be the best. Better yet is a real human to help you out, a data recovery specialist. These angels are trained at putting back together the pieces of files. If your data were valuable, it would be worth it to enlist their aid. It will cost a little more, but you will be glad you called for their help.

Now let's talk a little bit about recovering photos that you just can't find. You will need to know what you are looking for and how it is saved. Is it saved in JPEG maybe? You need to find out. Here again you will need recovery software that is compatible with your file. For digital images you can use Flash Recovery however you cannot use this for those burned on you CD.

To recover Microsoft Office documents a great system to try is DOC Regenerator. You can try this free of charge. That way you can determine if the recovery works for you. before you spend the money on it. To repair a damaged Office document we recommend Advanced Word Repair or Advanced Excel Repair.

Because emails are not saved as individual files, these ideas do not work for them. Emails can only be recovered by normal file recovery ways if the entire file has been lost or deleted. A lost email may have been moved to a special folder if you have set this up. This folder allows you to recover anything lost. Emails can be recovered using unique email recovery software. Once again you need to acquire an email recovery system specialized for you software. Outlook Express Repair if very good and anyone can figure it out. If you have Microsoft Outlook files you will need to get Advanced Outlook Repair which cost more. But it is worth it.

How To Recover Data Lost From Viruses, Power Surges, And More

Many of us work on computers these days. The work we do is important and it is always at risk. The many risks could include viruses, power surges, thunderstorms, natural disasters, human mistakes, and hackers. These things are real and we don't think they will ever happen to us. Our computer work every day and we never expect anything to go wrong. But then one day it happens! Lightening strikes and the power goes out just as you are finishing something you just can't live without and can't redo! It is a hard lesson learned too late. But not too late to do better the next time.

You should back up your files just to be sure you don't lose anything. If the hard drive does fail, a data recovery system id a great option to keep in mind. If your program begins to do weird things, shut the computer down right away to avoid losing anything.

Your hard drive may be destroyed in time if you continue. It is better to be safe than sorry. If you do lose data, try not to repair the hard drive yourself unless you are an expert at it. Instead enlist the aid of a professional data recovery service. You could just ruin things if you try to do it yourself. All of your data could be lost and that wouldn't be worth it. Recovering data takes time, special tools and a clean place.

If you try to do this yourself you could just make it all worse. With the software available, you may think that you can just do it yourself. That would be very risky. You may do more damage than good. Just think of the cost of replacing your whole hard drive. Your best bet would be to contact a data recovery service. You can rest assured that your computer will be well taken care of. If the company does ruin your computer, they would be obliged to replace it. However, this rarely happens. They are very skilled and can recover whatever data you have lost. What happens if there is just nothing to be done about your hard drive? Should this occur you might just have to buy a new hard drive.

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