P2P

Winter24

Peer to Peer: ILTA's Quarterly Magazine

Issue link: https://epubs.iltanet.org/i/1530716

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63 I L T A N E T . O R G Strengths Organizations can access archived data when necessary, such as for legal or business purposes. Archiving helps mitigate some risks of retaining data by segregating inactive information from active systems. Data can be archived even before its retention period has been met since archiving does not constitute permanent disposal. Weaknesses Archived data can still be considered retained data, and keeping it beyond the mandated retention period can result in legal violations. Organizations must still dispose of archived data once it is no longer justifiable to retain it for legal or business purposes. Retaining unnecessary archived data is a source of liability for the organization. OTHER METHODS USED BY ORGANIZATIONS Many organizations, however, use other techniques to remove personal and sensitive data from their databases. Organizations use these methods because they help balance the need to mitigate data retention risks while still extracting value or retrieving the data if needed. Below, we define these techniques, highlight their strengths, and discuss their limitations. W X ARCHIVING Definition: Archiving involves transferring inactive data to a dedicated storage system, potentially managed by a third party for long-term retention. It is not inherently a method of disposal. FEATURES

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