the evolution and management of email

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Ri d F t Ri ccar d o F erran t e Smithsonian Institution Archives ACDA 2010 – Mundelein, IL

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Page 1: The Evolution and Management of Email

Ri d F t Riccardo Ferrante Smithsonian Institution Archives

ACDA 2010 – Mundelein, IL

Page 2: The Evolution and Management of Email

1965 – Electronic mail allows users on a single mainframe t t i t ith h th MIT’ CTSS d computer to communicate with each other. MIT’s CTSS and

SDC’s (System Development Corporation, a spinoff of Rand Corp, that was sold to Unisys in the mid 80’s) Q321966 f tibl t “ il” h th 1966 – users of compatible systems can “email” each other: BITNET, Unix mail, IBM, DEC1969 – first electronic mail sent between disparate systems over ARPANET1971 – “@” address demarcation first used to send email from one DEC system to another DEC system1982 – Email transmission protocol standard SMTP (RFC 821) and ARPA ITM (RFC 822) published.

Page 3: The Evolution and Management of Email

1980’s – Email applications developed for PCs and LANs. P i t t i l d f t t “d d ” th Proprietary systems include features to “decode” the mail from competitors’ systems. Cc:Mail, Microsoft Mail, Banyan VINES, Lotus Notes, AppleMail, Groupwise(previously WordPerfect Office)(previously WordPerfect Office)Mid 1990’s

– attachments and HTML added as a result of MIME standard (RFC 2045 in 11/1996)standard (RFC 2045 in 11/1996)– web hosted email services

2001 – Email standard RFC 822 superseded by RFC 2822Mid 2000’ E il d id i liti ti Mid 2000’s - Enron emails used as evidence in litigation, posted to the Web2008 – RFC 2822 superseded by RFC 5322

Page 4: The Evolution and Management of Email

Messages sent within one computer system

Page 5: The Evolution and Management of Email

Messages sent between systems that are the same

Page 6: The Evolution and Management of Email

ARPANET

DEC

IBM

DEC

Messages sent between different systems

BITNET

Page 7: The Evolution and Management of Email

ARPANET

@[email protected]

BITNET

Page 8: The Evolution and Management of Email

1982 -- Standard published for message format – RFC 821, RFC 822

PC and LAN’s support proprietary email apps

PC’s & LAN’s

Page 9: The Evolution and Management of Email

1982 -- Standard published for message format – RFC 821, RFC 822

PC and LAN’s support proprietary email apps

Examples:

Microsoft Mail WordPerfect Office(later Novell Groupwise)

Cc:Mail

Banyan VINES

Lotus Notes

Banyan VINES

Page 10: The Evolution and Management of Email

1982 -- Standard published for message format – RFC 821, RFC 822

PC and LAN’s support proprietary email apps

Examples:

Microsoft Mail WordPerfect Office(later Novell Groupwise)

Cc:Mail

Banyan VINES

Lotus Notes

Banyan VINES

Page 11: The Evolution and Management of Email

E ilEmail

SignatureOrganization

DDocs

Page 12: The Evolution and Management of Email

Web based email servicesWeb-based email services

Email

… and others

Email

SignatureOrganization

Docs

Organization

Page 13: The Evolution and Management of Email

Email data format standard updated2001 – Email standard RFC 2822 supersedes RFC 822 (1982)2008 RFC 5322 supersedes RFC 2822 (2001)2008 – RFC 5322 supersedes RFC 2822 (2001)

Emails used as evidence in litigation posted to Emails used as evidence in litigation, posted to the WebLegislation passed to include electronic records g pin discoverable documents

Page 14: The Evolution and Management of Email

Email is ubiquitous

That means email can be is:

Official recordsO i ti dOrganization records

Personal papers

Page 15: The Evolution and Management of Email

Paper-based recordkeeping systemsElectronic recordkeeping systems

Adequate and reliable? ERMS systems (DoD 5015.2)y ( )http://jitc.fhu.disa.mil/recmgt/register.html

BothBothU.S. GAO reports

Information Management: The Challenge of Managing Electronic Records June 17 2010Electronic Records. June 17, 2010.Federal Records: Agencies Face Challenges in Managing E-mails. April 23, 2008.

NoneNone

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Acquiring historic correspondence at very high risk.With records management systems in place, still a hit or miss proposition

Tension between minimized vulnerabilities and keeping historic recordshistoric recordsAlso applicable, policies calling for destruction of email based on non-content criteria (age, number in account, etc.)

Without a companion Record Management System Catch as catch can – which usually means it doesn’t get capturedI di id l il d t di k tt d t d i f ldIndividual emails saved to a diskette and tossed in a folderPrinted and filedNothing

Page 17: The Evolution and Management of Email

What we get is what we getg g

Proactive acquisitionElectronic record management systemsEmail capture systems

EMCAP a joint project of North Carolina and EMCAP, a joint project of North Carolina and Kentucky

System-configured declaration or user-declared

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Under the hoodClassificationRecords Disposition SchedulesWorking with an ERMS implementation

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RelationshipsEmail administrationDisaster recovery plansPolicy

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Reducing liabilities without losing historyg gThorough application of records management practicesPolicy directives supporting acquisition & retention Policy directives supporting acquisition & retention of historical documentsAbility to constrain access based on litigation or other legal activitiesConsistent, documented procedures and policies

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What is the archival object?The lifecycle question

Message by message, or in groups

What about attachments and nested emails (threads)?

Obsolescence

Page 22: The Evolution and Management of Email

Using ERMS’sUsing ERMS s

Using XML

Individual or consortial systems approach?

Projects to consultProjects to consultEMCAP – Email Capture & PreservationCERP – Collaborative Electronic Records ProjectPEDALS – Persistent Digital Archives & Library SystemsHUL – Harvard University Libraries

Page 23: The Evolution and Management of Email

Ricc FerranteIT Archivist and Director of Digital Services

Smithsonian Institution Archives 202-633-5906

[email protected]

Page 24: The Evolution and Management of Email