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May 12, 2010

Smarsh and Socialware Partner to Offer Integrated Messaging and Social Media Compliance

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Organizations can handle the SEC/FINRA consent hazards of Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter inside the Smarsh e-mail and electronic information archiving and consent suite, utilised by 10,000 organizations world-wide

Smarsh, the managed services leader in protected and trustworthy electronic mail archiving and consent methods, nowadays announced a partnership with Socialware, a leader in supporting corporations cope with, embrace and leverage public communal networks.

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The partnership brings in concert the companies’ revolutionary systems to deliver a one of a kind resolution for messaging and communal video governance and consent. The 360-degree providing will integrate Socialware’s coverage enforcement, capture, moderation and analytics abilities for third-party networking web pages which includes Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter, considering the complex information archiving and consent platform from Smarsh.

“Socialware has made a groundbreaking middleware remedy and our partnership has yielded a one-of-a-kind engineering presenting for messaging and sociable video consent,” reported Stephen Marsh, Smarsh founder and CEO. “With this partnership, organizations can insert themselves from the stream of online community info flow and proactively enforce plan, mitigate chance and responsibly leverage the effective probable of online community being a organization device.”

Powered by Socialware’s Compass remedy, the new integrated presenting contains the preservation, supervision and coverage controls that help personal expert services companies to run in consent with SEC and FINRA regulations. Organizations can effectively navigate the record-keeping, suitability and supervision difficulties linked with communal content, as detailed within the recently-issued FINRA Regulatory Discover 10-06.

“Smarsh can be a reliable leader in messaging consent and in concert we are tackling a key difficulty in regulated industries – how you can ideal leverage the public online community websites exactly where customers, partners and customers reside,” mentioned Kip McClanahan, CEO of Socialware. “The intricacies of cultural content current distinctive worries, requiring in-depth information of the way in which individuals and consumers act and react to written content. We are ecstatic to partner with Smarsh to help you companies let the possibilities of interpersonal movie like a channel for business enterprise.” The integrated cultural film consent resolution is accessible immediately as a result of Smarsh. For additional details, speak to Smarsh at 1-866-SMARSH1 (762-7741) or pay a visit to www.smarsh.com.

October 11, 2009

T-Mobile Sidekick Disaster: Danger’s Servers Crashed, And They Don’t Have A Backup

Filed under: Tech News — Tags: , , , — codyellis1989 @ 5:44 pm

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by Jason Kincaid on October 10, 2009

Wow. T-Mobile and Danger, the Microsoft-owned subsidiary that makes the Sidekick, has just announced that they’ve likely lost all user data that was being stored on Microsoft’s servers due to a server failure. That means that any contacts, photos, calendars, or to-do lists that haven’t been locally backed up are gone. Apparently if you don’t turn off your Sidekick and make sure its battery doesn’t run out you can salvage what’s currently stored on the device, otherwise you’re out of luck: Microsoft/Danger is describing the likelihood of recovering the data from their servers as “extremely low”.

T-Mobile Sidekick users have been suffering from a major outage all week, and that issue apparently hasn’t been resolved either.

This goes beyond FAIL, face-palm, or any of the other internet memes we’ve come to associate with incompetence. The fact that T-Mobile and/or Microsoft Danger don’t have a redundant backup is simply inexcusable, especially given the fact that the Sidekick is totally reliant on the cloud because it doesn’t store its data locally. Microsoft acquired Danger for $500 million in February 2008.

Update:: There is some speculation that this was not actually caused by a server meltdown, but by Danger’s failure to make a backup before a Storage Area Network upgrade that was botched.

The full letter to customers is below.

T-MOBILE AND MICROSOFT/DANGER STATUS UPDATE ON SIDEKICK DATA DISRUPTION

Dear valued T-Mobile Sidekick customers:

T-Mobile and the Sidekick data services provider, Danger, a subsidiary of Microsoft, are reaching out to express our apologies regarding the recent Sidekick data service disruption. We appreciate your patience as Microsoft/Danger continues to work on maintaining platform stability, and restoring all services for our Sidekick customers.

Regrettably, based on Microsoft/Danger’s latest recovery assessment of their systems, we must now inform you that personal information stored on your device – such as contacts, calendar entries, to-do lists or photos – that is no longer on your Sidekick almost certainly has been lost as a result of a server failure at Microsoft/Danger. That said, our teams continue to work around-the-clock in hopes of discovering some way to recover this information. However, the likelihood of a successful outcome is extremely low. As such, we wanted to share this news with you and offer some tips and suggestions to help you rebuild your personal content. You can find these tips at the T-Mobile Sidekick Forums (http://www.t-mobile.com/sidekick ). We encourage you to visit the Forums on a regular basis to access the latest updates as well as FAQs regarding this service disruption.

In addition, we plan to communicate with you on Monday (Oct. 12) the status of the remaining issues caused by the service disruption, including the data recovery efforts and the Download Catalog restoration which we are continuing to resolve. We also will communicate any additional tips or suggestions that may help in restoring your content.

We recognize the magnitude of this inconvenience. Our primary efforts have been focused on restoring our customers’ personal content. We also are considering additional measures for those of you who have lost your content to help reinforce how valuable you are as a T-Mobile customer.

We continue to advise customers to NOT reset their device by removing the battery or letting their battery drain completely, as any personal content that currently resides on your device will be lost.

Once again, T-Mobile and Microsoft/Danger regret any and all inconvenience this matter has caused.

Via Engadget

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