The Hanzo Blog

21 Oct 08

Producer required to re-produce .TIFF documents in a “reasonably searchable” format

Producing web resources in native format can be burdensome. But we’ve changed that dramatically with our web e-discovery products. Don’t expect to get away with this anymore…

From Producer required to re-produce .TIFF documents in a “reasonably searchable” format : Electronic Discovery Blog

Hanzo uses client-side archiving technology, including proprietary web crawlers, API’s and plug-ins, that enable preservation of web resources in their native format: exactly the same format presented to browsers.

These resources are stored in archive files together with metadata verifying their authenticity. The archive files are ingested into a web archive and indexed. These can then be browsed the same way as the original website, along any captured timeline, and searched across full text, metadata and time.

More information on this is in our white paper “E-discovery: Why Archiving Your Web Presence is a Business Necessity”.

If a Web page, blog, thread in a customer forum, or your whole website were required by the courts, how would you be able to obtain the exact version required and present it as it was originally? How would you verify its authenticity? As regulations concerning corporate records and e-discovery proceedings are extended to include Web content, can you be certain you are compliant?

This white paper looks at compliance and e-discovery issues relating to Web content, and assesses the technologies you need to archive your Total Web Presence.