Why IT should start throwing data away
It can be a storage nightmare: Given expanding regulatory requirements and the key role that electronic records now play in lawsuits, some enterprises are saving every bit of data they have, just to be safe. As a gauge of storage demand, IDC says the total amount of disk storage shipped last year grew 40.5 percent from 2007.
Sure, storage media are getting less expensive. The cost of a gigabyte of disk storage fell more than 27 percent from 2007 to 2008, according to IDC. But with the storage requirements of average enterprises rapidly growing, keeping it all forever can create long-term management challenges and lead to headaches when something needs to be found. Analysts, attorneys, and vendors say enterprises are better off getting rid of some data -- but doing it judiciously. For IT departments, that means planning, carefully executing, and not going it alone.
"More companies are sensitive to the fact that we can't just keep throwing storage at the issue," says IDC analyst Rick Villars. Letting fast-growing data stores build up year after year isn't sustainable, he says. Companies that save everything are often those that aren't sure what needs to be saved or deleted, he adds -- a sign that they're setting themselves up for trouble.
On top of the price of disks, tapes, networks and management, piling up too much data can come back to haunt a company in case of a lawsuit. It may cost $1 million to find and compile the data requested in "e-discovery," the process of collecting electronic data as evidence, says Andrew Cohen, vice president of e-discovery and compliance at EMC.
Those who've studied this dilemma recommend a variety of steps to make sure that a company is neither saving too much nor endangering itself by improperly deleting information. There are technologies out there to help, but it also takes human input, they note.
The data-storage problem
Every organization needs to save information for its own purposes, such as institutional memory, transaction lookup and analysis, and so on. Plus, regulations such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) require enterprises to save certain kinds of content for a prescribed period. And more such regulations are in the works, notes Enterprise Strategy Group analyst Brian Babineau. "If you're in business, you're going to be regulated somehow," he says.
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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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