Thursday, August 28, 2003
Taming E-Mail - Pundit E-mail - CIO Magazine Aug 15,2003PUNDIT
E-mail
Taming E-Mail
How to keep your messaging from spinning out of control
E-MAIL HAS ALWAYS been more painful to manage than it should be. Early versions of Exchange bombed for no apparent reason, while the Notes/Domino server mired e-mail management in a groupware muddle. With Exchange 2000 and Domino Server version 6, the top two e-mail servers have matured and stabilized. But now the forces of darkness have conspired to make things difficult once again.
The problem is that people are getting more e-mail and deleting less. The biggest new reason for bloat is spam: IT managers now invariably use the word exponential to describe spam's ugly hockey stick, which (if you believe some reports) accounts for as much as 50 percent of all corporate e-mail. Compounding the problem, Enron, WorldCom and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act have everybody spooked. Should I save that e-mail from Bob forever in case the attorney general calls?
The result is that e-mail stores are ballooning out of control like never before. And that's bad news for a couple of reasons. One is day-to-day performance: E-mail server databases were never intended to handle a jillion unarchived messages. And, of course, all e-mail servers have hard limits on the size of their stores. But the real problem is the time it takes to do backups and restore when those files get really gargantuan.
Here are a few strategies to consider in taming the e-mail monster.
The most interesting trend in e-mail may be the recognition that so much of an enterprise's intellectual capital is bound up in e-mail messages.
—Eric Knorr
Get serious about spam—now. Simple domain blacklists can cut the spam problem in half immediately; the SenderBase free Web service from e-mail hardware vendor IronPort Systems could help you keep tabs on the worst offenders. New enterprise spam-filtering software such as CloudMark Authority, MailFrontier and ProofPoint install on your server and offer tons of options, but don't go overboard. You don't want false positives, nor do you want IT to have to review "suspect" spam every day, so be conservative with your filter settings and think in terms of cutting rather than eliminating.
Taming E-Mail
How to keep your messaging from spinning out of control
E-MAIL HAS ALWAYS been more painful to manage than it should be. Early versions of Exchange bombed for no apparent reason, while the Notes/Domino server mired e-mail management in a groupware muddle. With Exchange 2000 and Domino Server version 6, the top two e-mail servers have matured and stabilized. But now the forces of darkness have conspired to make things difficult once again.
The problem is that people are getting more e-mail and deleting less. The biggest new reason for bloat is spam: IT managers now invariably use the word exponential to describe spam's ugly hockey stick, which (if you believe some reports) accounts for as much as 50 percent of all corporate e-mail. Compounding the problem, Enron, WorldCom and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act have everybody spooked. Should I save that e-mail from Bob forever in case the attorney general calls?
The result is that e-mail stores are ballooning out of control like never before. And that's bad news for a couple of reasons. One is day-to-day performance: E-mail server databases were never intended to handle a jillion unarchived messages. And, of course, all e-mail servers have hard limits on the size of their stores. But the real problem is the time it takes to do backups and restore when those files get really gargantuan.
Here are a few strategies to consider in taming the e-mail monster.
The most interesting trend in e-mail may be the recognition that so much of an enterprise's intellectual capital is bound up in e-mail messages.
—Eric Knorr
Get serious about spam—now. Simple domain blacklists can cut the spam problem in half immediately; the SenderBase free Web service from e-mail hardware vendor IronPort Systems could help you keep tabs on the worst offenders. New enterprise spam-filtering software such as CloudMark Authority, MailFrontier and ProofPoint install on your server and offer tons of options, but don't go overboard. You don't want false positives, nor do you want IT to have to review "suspect" spam every day, so be conservative with your filter settings and think in terms of cutting rather than eliminating.
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