|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SPECIAL REPORT
The White House email controversy: get ready for the hearings
By David Gewirtz
Even though Where Have All The Emails Gone? is finally out, that doesn't mean the story of White House email is over. Far from it. In fact, this week saw a number of new developments in Washington. In this article, I'll give you an overview of the latest developments as well as my analysis.
Let's bring you up to date. Back in November, U.S. District Judge Henry Kennedy ordered defendants to preserve all back-ups in the "possess[ion of EOP] or under their custody or control."
"Both the judge and the Oversight Committee seems to be completely overlooking the vast amount of White House email not managed by the White House."
|
Last month, the White House acknowledged "recycling" backup tapes that may have contained missing email messages, in effect overwriting the much sought-after data. This was in response to a court order demanding White House disclosure. Specifically, the court asked:
- Are the back-ups catalogued, labeled or otherwise identified to indicate the period of time they cover?
- Are the back-ups catalogued, labeled or otherwise identified to indicate the data contained therein?
- Do the back-ups contain emails written and received between 2003-2005?
- Do the back-ups contain the emails said to be missing that are the subject of this lawsuit?
It turns out the White House has filed a response to to the court that contains a very detailed and credible level of detail.
As you know, in my investigation I generally only like to link to government-provided documents, since they are considered valid first-party source material. While I haven't been able to find a government-provided version of the response, I was able to find a PDF of the full statement located on a site operated by one of the organizations filing the lawsuits.
This White House response PDF is the most detailed overview of White House IT and backups we've seen.
Specifically, it confirms the use of Exchange servers, mentions using journaled .pst files as part of the backup strategy, confirms backups to tape, and describes the network at the Executive Office of the President as having "3000 users and customers, in excess of 200 servers, and over 100 applications."
Theresa Payton, Chief Information Officer, Office of Administration, Executive Office of the President states that she believes there are intact backups from the period between 2003-2005. However, she also states:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-- Advertisement --
ONLINE GROUP CALENDAR - FOR UP TO 100 OF YOUR CLOSEST FRIENDS
Stay organized and in control with 24/7 access to all of your important events, projects and files --whether you're at work, at home or on the road.
You can share your calendar, projects and files so everyone in your office is up to date. Plus, search your entire group to find times when everyone is available to meet, manage company resources and much more.
Organize your entire team for as low as $9.95 per year (and yes, that's where the decimal place is supposed to be!)
Tap here to get started right away. |
-- Advertisement --
How Much Time Do You Waste Typing The Same Responses Over And Over?
InsertText goes way beyond signatures, saves you time, and helps you respond to your correspondents much faster than ever before.
- Insert repeated text fragments
- Write templates that you can reuse later
- Easy to use even if you have hundreds of templates
- Much more than just copy & paste
- Works inside Outlook and from the System Tray
Turn a 10 minute chore into a 30-second point and click task.
Tap here to download a fully-functional 30-day trial. |
|
|
|
|
|
The Power Magazine for Microsoft Outlook and Exchange Users at OutlookPower.com
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide. Outlook is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|