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TODAY'S TOP SOA & WEBSERVICES LINKS Storage Protocols SOX & Storage
The ABCs
By: David Breisacher
Feb. 3, 2005 12:00 AM
Because of today's emphasis on stakeholder accountability and changing oversight structures, business management is more answerable than at anytime in the past for assuring the accuracy, protection, and access to, financial and other business transactional information. This is creating a partnership of responsibility between the IT domain and the organization's executive management. Recent actions of lawmakers and industry regulators are hitting hard at recordkeeping practices, with specific requirements for the long-term collection and safeguarding of, and quick access to, reams of vital information of all types. As you are probably aware, the Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Act mandates changes in financial and corporate reporting, delineates rules for the retention of documents of all types, and provides stiff penalties for the alteration or destruction of records. The act is far-reaching, applying to securities broker-dealers and all companies listed on the U.S. securities markets. The SEC is requiring that publicly traded companies with market capitalizations over $75 million meet major SOX compliance directives by November 15th of this year (smaller market cap organizations have until July 15th of 2005 to comply). Failure to meet these deadlines can result in substantial financial penalties for corporations, and/or fines and imprisonment of up to 20 years for CEOs and other corporate officers. In practice, the portions of SOX regulations dealing with the implementation of improved records management and protection processes will fall heavily on IT. In order to achieve compliance, additional investments in storage devices, specialized software, new types of media, and enhanced records management controls will be necessary. We at GST, as storage solutions specialists, believe we have a responsibility to the business community to depict what we believe are the best storage management options that can lessen the burden and cost of SOX compliance as it relates to the collection, protection, archiving, and validation of enterprise data. Because SOX regulations pertaining to recordkeeping demand that stored data not be altered in any way, solutions more often than not will include a computer storage component. This storage component must be one that can be easily customized for your enterprise environment and is affordable, otherwise it won't be implemented even if it fulfills SOX and other requirements. For every "perp walked" exec that goes to jail on TV, there are others that watch and are not moved by it. Beyond government threats of jail and fines, there needs to be the wherewithall to get there in a reasonable fashion, otherwise there could be wholesale non-compliance. We believe one storage technology that can bring affordable relief to the SOX landscape is a magnetic recording methodology called Write-once, Read-Many (WORM). How WORM functionality might best be implemented to address evolving storage requirements to meet SOX (and an onslaught of similar regulatory actions) is presented below as the A(Assessment), B (Backup & retention), and C (Compliance) of SOX and storage. (A)ssessment However, as daunting as this all seems, SOX should not be considered a burden, but rather a benefit. While compliance with this legislation may repurpose time and money away from other IT projects, upgrading the internal controls over vital recordkeeping should be an ongoing corporate mission and a high-priority, with or without SOX deadlines looming in the not-to-distant future. At GST, we believe each organization must conduct an enterprise-wide assessment of its storage management landscape as the first step in determining what must be done to meet mandated compliance standards in a way that adds value to the rest of the organization. For those organizations that have already focused on governance, the assessment will show that SOX compliance won't be a disruptive element, as many of its directives would have already been implemented to some degree. For others, the assessment will be a wakeup call and an opportunity to upgrade storage and backup methodologies, disaster recovery practices, and storage management processes, which have been neglected and fallen behind current practices after years of lean budgets and staff cutbacks. (B)ack Up and Retention SOX doesn't specify the use of a specific storage technology to accomplish its criteria for long-term data retention and availability on tamper-proof media with verifiable audit trails. WORM magnetic tape functionality, built into new WORM-enabled drives and WORM data cartridges, is the most sensible solution in many cases. WORM identifies a storage technology that includes built-in protection against writing over or erasing any data stored on the media. If additional data or revisions are recorded, they are appended at the end of the existing records on the media, thus creating a continuous audit trail of record additions, changes and deletions. WORM tape drives and cartridges provide the best mix of high performance, high capacity, unalterable backup and long-term retention of data at an affordable cost. WORM functionality is also available on optical disk drives and magnetic hard drives, however both of these options have major drawbacks today. Optical disk's technical properties restrict capacity, performance (speed), and come with a high cost-per-megabyte (million bytes) of stored data. Magnetic disk drives (hard drives) are impractical in terms of easy removal for remote long-term storage due to their lack of portability. WORM tape media provides higher capacities of up to 1.3 terabytes (trillion bytes) and increased performance of up to 280 gigabytes (billion bytes) an hour at a lower cost-per-MB than either of the other options. Sony Electronics incorporated WORM functionality into their Super-AIT (SAIT) and AIT (Advanced Tape Technology) tape drives. These WORM drives operate with special versions of SAIT and AIT data cartridges. The WORM option is added to the AIT family of tape drives through firmware stored in the WORM data cartridge's Remote Memory-in-Cassette chip making these drives multifunctional ... Sony's SAIT drives accept either WORM or standard (writable/erasable) tape media. By incorporating WORM functionality into a tape backup solution, we gain the time-tested benefits of tape which are capacity and performance with native capacities up to 500 GB with 30 MB/sec transfer rates (1.3TB capacity with a 78MB/sec transfer rate using 2.6:1 compression). Long-term durability (estimated shelf-life of WORM media is over 30 years), portability (tape cartridges can be easily removed and stored offsite), and the lowest cost of ownership of any WORM media (well below $1/GB) lead us to conclude that tape backup systems with WORM functionality will be the most prevalent SOX-compliant backup technology. Since WORM media protects against over-writes, revisions, or erasing of the stored data. long-term safe storage of retained records is ensured so long as the tapes are protected from environmental damage. On all storage media with WORM, the functionality provides advanced search techniques for easy and quick indexing and access to all stored data. Consequently, WORM meets these records management requirements of SOX and other SEC regulations. The next challenge is to ensure a fail-safe backup process that won't fail in the middle, and to get the backup media offsite as quickly as possible. GST developed Server-Transparent Media DuplicationTM (SMTDTM) which is a process to ensure that backup media creates two identical backup sets during the backup operation with no extra workload placed on the server. This SMTD, commonly called mirrored backup, delivers identical sets of backup media on GST's dual-drive and mirrored library backup products. GST's Mirrored Backup Technology using SMTDTM permits identical sets of backup tapes to be created simultaneously during the backup operation. Following the backup, one backup set is retained on-site for any rapid restores that are needed, while the second identical set is safely removed to a secure remote site that can either be a disaster-proof vault or a Disaster Recovery Center. Another unique capability of mirrored backup configuration (all of which use two tape drives for writing backup tapes or for reading them during a backup restore process) is called Fail-Safe Backup/Restore. During a Mirrored Backup, if a drive fails for any reason, the tape controller attached to both drives continues to write data to the second drive, completing the backup (or restore) process. You can then go off-line to make the duplicate set of tapes needed for the DR center. (C)ompliance Other smart steps to take that ensure compliance with SOX records retention regulations and avoid the risk of incurring stiff penalties, are to select tape drives and media with the highest reliability ratings. Both MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) and Head Life Expectancy are longstanding storage industry measurements of drive reliability. For example, the SAIT-1 drives used in GST's tape subsystems and libraries have an MTBF of 500,000 hours and a magnetic head life expectancy of 50,000 hours. Likewise, a good reliability measurement for media is the number of passes a cartridge can endure under heavy usage. The WORM SAIT-1 media is certified for error-free operation for up to 30,000 end-to-end passes. Sony's WORM drives support both traditional rewritable cartridges and WORM media, facilitating storage policies that dictate when WORM media is to be used and when rewritable cartridges can be used. "Tape continues to be a desirable format for archival storage, and the addition of write-once solutions allows companies to economically meet their storage needs as well as comply with mandates for record storing," noted Fara Yale, Research Vice President at Gartner Dataquest. The SAIT and AIT WORM tape drives and media are designed to meet the SEC's regulatory safety, security, and integrity requirements for electronic storage. Use of WORM media eliminates accidental and intentional erasure of data, enables time and date authentication, and facilitates quick search and retrieval of archived files (most files can be retrieved in about a minute) to support regulatory audits. The managing of the backup process and archival media is greatly simplified and controls and security strengthened by selecting a tape backup solution with a high capacity. For many sites, today's high-capacity tape cartridges (up to 1.3 TB of data when using data compression) permit an entire daily backup to fit on a single data cartridge, making it easy to ship that single cartridge to a Disaster Recovery or remote vaulting site each day and simplifying cataloging, labeling, storing retrieving, and media management. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act is designed to protect stakeholders -- those with risk tied to an enterprise's performance, which most often includes the organization's shareholders, employees, partners, and customers. Shareholders expect an accurate picture of performance to be delivered in a timely manner. Employees expect continuous operations. Partners, such as financial institutions, require reliable financial reporting and accounting processes. Strategic allies expect delivery of service/products in accordance with contractual agreements. All of these stakeholders are at risk when an organization's financial reporting, controls, and business processes are suspect, inaccurate, or unverifiable. All are served by Sarbanes-Oxley compliance along with associated regulations and oversight organizations. SOX, however, also provides benefits to the complying organization. The corporate responsibility and increased disclosure directives demand that time, energy, and resources are used to upgrade records management, which often means IT operations. Because storage upgrades of software and devices may have to be installed, and improvements made to backup and archival processes to meet compliance requirements, IT operations will be improving business productivity along with financial and accounting reporting. Everyone benefits. Once a SOX compliance plan for records backup and retention is developed and implemented, rehearsals and reviews on a regular basis are necessary to ensure that plans are continuing to meet compliance objectives. Fully working and tested recordkeeping procedures and compliance plans are the antidote for protecting business processes against obsolete practices and non-compliance leading to stiff fines and even jail time. YOUR FEEDBACK
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