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Ask Slashdot: Best (or Better) Ways To Archive Email?

An anonymous reader writes: I've been using email since the early '90s and have probably half a million emails in various places and accounts. Some of them are currently in .tar files, others in the original folders from obsolete or I-don't-use-them-anymore mail clients. Some IMAP, some POP3. You get the picture. I don't often need to access emails older than a year or two, but when I do, I have found that my only hope for the truly archived ones is to guess what Grep combo might find the right text in the file ... and then pick through the often unformatted, unwrapped, super ugly text until I find the email address or info that I'm searching for. Because of this, I tend to at-all-costs leave emails on servers or at least in the clients so that I can more easily search and find.

My question is whether there's any way to safely store them in a way that I can actually use them later, offline, in a way that allows for easy date searches, email address searches, and so on. Thunderbird for example has 'Archive' as an option, but if I migrate to a different client I assume that won't work anymore. So what ways to people archive emails effectively? Or is this totally a lost cause and I should keep limping along with grep?

3 of 177 comments (clear)

  1. Re:hoarding mentality by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Holding your business emails too long is a liability risk..

    I was just asked to recover email from the late 90s as part of a means to prove we had prior art on a patent that was being asserted against us. The email history included draft drawings, work orders to a manufacturer requesting customizations to our manufacturing equipment, invoices and negotiations with customers to work with it. etc. All with a clearly documented timeline that could be verified with multiple 3rd parties if it came to a court situation.

    This sword clearly cuts both ways.

  2. Re:hoarding mentality by jonnyj · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no good reason to keep 25 years of email.

    There is no good reason to assume that your needs are the same as those of others.

  3. Re:hoarding mentality by swb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I had a client who insisted he needed to keep every email forever. I thought he was full of shit until he explained to me why.

    He works as a vendor rep, helping them sell shit to a well-known Fortune 50 retailer.

    As it turns out, this Fortune 50 company periodically audits years old (like sometimes 5+ years) invoices and receiving information and arbitrarily decides "we just realized that shipment you sent us in 2009 was short, but we paid the invoice in full. So we're going to subtract the overpayment -- plus interest -- from the current amount we owe you."

    Part of this guy's job was the ability to get the shipping/receiving info as it happens, and the old email lets him present info that basically says "you said it was a complete shipment in 2009, so no deductions".

    What I found kind of amazing was that somehow this retroactive auditing is considered acceptable. My guess is vendors are just expected to eat it or not get their product on the shelves.