Email's Mea Culpa
By James Rogers
June 25, 2007
5:50 PM -- Could you really get hold of a specific email if lawyers or the SEC were breathing down your neck?
A study released today by Osterman Research reveals that more and more firms are coming under pressure to quickly retrieve emails in the aftermath of legal
action. The survey, sponsored by archiving vendor LiveOffice, found that 63 percent of the 400 IT managers surveyed have already been required to find
emails as a result of a legal action.
Worryingly, nearly a third of the execs polled said that, even if they had to, they would not be able to lay their hands on an email that is a year old.
Similarly, more than half said that they are not ready to meet the data retention requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP), which forces
firms to make electronic documents available in legal disputes.
This followed a report earlier this month from analyst firm IDC, which shows that the need to store and retrieve email for legal purposes is helping drive
massive growth in the email archiving market, which grew 45 percent last year.
It looks as if lawyers are not the only ones rubbing their hands together at the moment -- our increasingly litigious society spells boom-time for technology
vendors, too.


