Forum Discussion
Retention Labels and destroying records
- Nov 07, 2017
To make sure we're talking about the same thing...
You can create a classification label that is applied automatically or manually to content (email and documents). The label can mark classified items as permanent records (see below).
Label marking item as a record
You can then publish the labels in policies to make them available to users or as auto-label policies to have them applied automatically to content that satisfies certain criteria.
When an item is marked as a permanent record, it is kept for the retention period specified by the label and then the retention action is executed (in the case above, the item is deleted after 20 years). No other action can happen to it during that time. From https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Overview-of-labels-af398293-c69d-465e-a249-d74561552d30:
Implement records management across Office 365, including both email and documents. You can use a label to classify content as a record. When this happens, the label can’t be changed or removed, and the content can’t be edited or deleted.
Thanks for your reply. I'm at a loss as to why this is the case. Surely records should be the most important items to have a retention policy?
Just to clarify when you say "mark an item as a permanent record" I assume you mean declare an item as a record? Does the same logic apply if I declare the items as records using a label?
To make sure we're talking about the same thing...
You can create a classification label that is applied automatically or manually to content (email and documents). The label can mark classified items as permanent records (see below).
Label marking item as a record
You can then publish the labels in policies to make them available to users or as auto-label policies to have them applied automatically to content that satisfies certain criteria.
When an item is marked as a permanent record, it is kept for the retention period specified by the label and then the retention action is executed (in the case above, the item is deleted after 20 years). No other action can happen to it during that time. From https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Overview-of-labels-af398293-c69d-465e-a249-d74561552d30:
Implement records management across Office 365, including both email and documents. You can use a label to classify content as a record. When this happens, the label can’t be changed or removed, and the content can’t be edited or deleted.
- Darrell BolgerNov 07, 2017Copper Contributor
OK, just to make sure I'm thinking about this in the right way:
- If I manually declare the item as a record, via Compliance Details menu, it will be permanently preserved even if it has a label applied.
- If I classify my content as a record as part of the label it will be retained for the retention period set by the label.
- In both instances the item is still immutable.
Thanks for your time, it is much appreciated.
- TonyRedmondNov 07, 2017MVP
Darrell Bolger wrote:OK, just to make sure I'm thinking about this in the right way:
- If I manually declare the item as a record, via Compliance Details menu, it will be permanently preserved even if it has a label applied.
TR: Which do you mean? If this is a SharePoint option, you should really forget about thinking about compliance using workload-specific features because all the focus is on features that work across Office 365, like classification labels. See https://www.petri.com/office-365-data-governance. Use the Office 365 features whenever possible.
- If I classify my content as a record as part of the label it will be retained for the retention period set by the label.
TR: Yes.
- In both instances the item is still immutable.
TR: For the label, yes.
Thanks for your time, it is much appreciated.
- Darrell BolgerNov 07, 2017Copper Contributor
Ok, the option to be able to define your own records is essential but I guess that can be done by selecting the correct label.
The challenge then is changing the RM narrative to fit into O365.
Once again, thanks for your time.