Hitachi
Data Systems (HDS) has unveiled a product at the
CeBIT show in Hanover
designed to help companies search and retrieve unmanaged data scattered
throughout the enterprise.
The firm claims that around 80 per cent of company data is unstructured and
located outside a managed database or email environment.
HDS reckons that only four per cent of this data is managed by a content
management system.
A report from analyst firm
IDC calculated
that ineffective search costs companies an estimated $5,251 per worker per year.
"A large percentage of corporate data is considered unmanaged or 'rogue',
posing a serious security and compliance risk to businesses," said Laura DuBois,
research director of storage software at IDC.
"As companies grapple with how to manage this information and put policies
around it, IT departments are looking for the best solutions to manage their
expanding information vaults."
The new Hitachi Data Discovery Suite offers powerful content index and search
services across network attached storage, content archive environments and areas
traditionally ignored by search technology.
The platform offers common search, retention, movement and protection of data
within an integrated services oriented platform, according to the company.
"Organisations are spending millions a year in e-discovery compounded by
escalating expenses associated with storage sprawl in environments with large
amounts of file-based or unstructured data," said John Mansfield, senior vice
president of global solutions, strategy and development at HDS.
"Previous generation file storage products were not designed to be efficient
in terms of storage utilisation and data management.
"We are taking our experience in storing and managing block storage
environments and extending that strength to file services, reducing the risk of
rogue data while improving operating efficiencies."
The Hitachi Data Discovery Suite takes an integrated services approach to
storage, helping users to search multiple data sources with a single query from
a single user interface.
By enabling customers to conduct their own searches and recover data from
their own authorised files, HDS claimed that it also improves user productivity
while ensuring data privacy.
"We view rogue data as a critical problem that the market and our customers
are trying to solve," said Michael Hay, senior director of product strategy at
HDS.
"Even moderate amounts of uncontrolled rogue data can increase the potential
of not finding the right data at the right time."
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