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Immutability in Exchange

In this video we spend some time talking about an aspect of our archiving and compliance story for Exchange on-premises and the service. Specifically, if you do decide to take advantage of the simplicity and lower costs of co-locating your ‘archive’ data with your primary mailbox data, (see here for a previous discussion about why we think this approach is better, cheaper and simpler) do you have to give up on immutability?

The short answer is an emphatic no; not only do you get a great immutability story, but you get one that provides more finely-tuned control over the content that you decide to make immutable. The slightly longer answer about how this works and how Exchange provides built-in immutability policies that allows companies to comply with important regulations and internal is in the video. If you want more detailed whitepapers on the subject please see here.

You may have also seen that we recently released PST Capture – this is another step in putting your rogue .pst files onto Exchange where you can get control of them and start treating that data with the same immutability story.

It was suggested to me that I provide some more information on a few specific things I talk about in the video. So talking about Documents, I of course meant any email or attachment or other item that you happen to have stored in your Exchange Mailbox. Also, when I talk about ‘’Dumpster 2.0” that really is only the internal name for our retention hold functionality and ‘officially’ it is called the Recoverable Items Folder.

I also made a reference to copy-on-write - for those that are interested, copy-on-write is a term that references an approach to handling modifying content without destroying the original content and involves making a copy of an item before writing. In Exchange, when the user wants to modify a message or other piece of content that is marked for retention hold (immutable) the server first makes a copy of the message then moves the original to the Dum…The Recoverable Items Folder and then makes the modifications to the copy.

I'm always interested in any comments you have on Immutability, Archiving or other Exchange topics you want me to talk about.

- Perry

Comments

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Thanks for your interest in the topic @Charles @Michael -- Yes, we have the same features available in Exchange Online.

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    The statement at the end of the paragraph you quoted is the part I would like to hold onto. Exchange does not create a fingerprint to notify you that the data was there.   Using a fingerprint/finger analogy: If the item is "deleted" by a user, the finger (not fingerprint) is retained without modifying the integrity of the message. If the item is changed, the original finger is retained, and a second finger is created with the new modified data.  (What we call copy-on-write). At the same time, we also provide the finger print for all access (auditing).   there is another portion where it states that "do not prevent the a record from being changed or deleted" - Exchange nevers alter the item.   Ankur

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Perry, Section iii states the following: "Broker-dealers and vendors of electronic record storage systems have asked whether broker-dealers may use, consistent with Rule 17a-4(f), systems they describe as storing records in a manner that prevents the records from being overwritten, erased or otherwise altered without relying solely on the system's hardware features. Specifically, these systems use integrated hardware and software codes that are intrinsic to the system to prevent the overwriting, erasure or alteration of the records. Thus, while the hardware storage medium used by these systems (e.g., magnetic disk) is inherently rewriteable, the integrated codes intrinsic to the system prevent anyone from overwriting the records." By using legal hold or rolling hold, you are using such software based codes.  

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Interesting and was informative too..!

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    @Carl PST Capture is limited to 1000 users today only for Exchange Online, not for on-premises. We will take the feedback for Online though - thank you. Ankur

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    err - the above was for Paul, not Perry.

  • Anonymous
    February 22, 2012
    Can I achieve the same using Exchange Online?

  • Anonymous
    April 12, 2012
    To be clear.  Are you saying that Microsoft Exchange 2010 meets industry regulations, specifically SEC 17a-4(f)(2)(ii)(A) that states that the electronic storage media must preserve records exclusively in a non-re-writeable, non-erasable format?

  • Anonymous
    April 13, 2012
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    April 24, 2012
    Hello Ankur and Perry, Just checking in again to see if you agree that Microsoft does or does not comply with SEC 17a-4 as listed in the SEC interpretation above? Thanks, Paul

  • Anonymous
    August 22, 2012
    Hi Perry, PST capture is not overly helpful given its got a 1000 limit cap! Does pose some challenges to large orgs. Any thoughts on this?