Organizations increasingly want to delete data from their archives the minute they're legally eligible to do so. "If you physically have the data, you are required to produce it, even if its retention period has expired," says Dave DuPont, senior VP of sales and marketing at Plasmon, which makes optical media and libraries.
For users who archive data to WORM optical platters, deleting data has long meant physically destroying the platter. But this summer, Plasmon added a new UDO cartridge to its lineup that improves basic WORM capabilities. Called Compliant Write Once (CWO), it allows you to delete data on a file-by-file basis, physically destroying the underlying media so it can't be written over--or read from--again.
To destroy the media, the UDO drive simply flips the bits on the
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Rich Castagna, Editorial DirectorThe idea of CWO came from UDO users themselves, says DuPont. "We hadn't even thought of it," he says. "Customers liked UDO's true WORM capabilities, but wanted to be able to remove data at some point down the road" without having to destroy the entire cartridge, he adds.
Nexsan's Assureon approach to data deletion is completely different. A contentaddressed storage (CAS) system, Assureon generates a hash for the files it stores on its system using 256-bit AES encryption. Coupled with a policy engine, when a given file or object reaches the end of its retention period, Assureon simply deletes the key, making it impossible to retrieve the file.
That approach to data destruction comes with one proviso, says Jon Oltsik, senior analyst for information security at the Enterprise Strategy Group, Milford, MA. "If you can prove that you've deleted the keys, it's a perfectly acceptable method of data destruction."
This was first published in October 2005