Weekend Herald

Family tree research lost in email blunder

- Chris Keall

Former IBM cloud computing executive Phil Sheehan has a message for others leaving Spark’s Xtra Mail, the formerly free web mail service that will incur a $5.95 per month fee for those who want to stay after May 16. “Don’t do what I did!”

In a LinkedIn post, the tech industry veteran said, “I am my family’s resident genealogis­t. For nearly 50 years, I have been accumulati­ng family history and stories in anecdotal, paper and digital forms.

“For almost 30 of those years, I have been an Xtra Mail customer, diligently saving much of my research and correspond­ence in a family history email folder.

“Effectivel­y, I was using Xtra as a cloud storage service, well before that term became popular. Xtra was managing multiple megabytes of my family tree content for most of the time I had been an Xtra customer.

“And then the unthinkabl­e happened.”

Sheehan then recounted that as he tried to move his Xtra emails to Microsoft Outlook, he clicked “Move Folder” at one point when he should have clicked “Import/Export.”

Decades of emails were gone, and neither Spark nor behind-the-scenes Xtra partner SMX could help him get them back.

“I trusted my email provider to have an efficient and effective backup and recovery process. Oh how wrong I was!” wrote Sheehan, who has also held roles at tech firms 9Spokes, Trade Window and Ingram Micro.

After three weeks of “frustratio­n levels go through the roof ”, Spark support responded via a chat.

It wasn’t worth the wait. “I came to the realisatio­n that while Xtra possibly do backups of their email data, they cannot do a recovery of an individual mailbox,” Sheehan wrote.

“We apologise for the poor customer experience Phil has received

While customers can regain access to their Xtra Mail within 90 days of their account being closed, we are unable to recover data that has been moved off our platform by a customer. Spokeswoma­n for Spark

. . . and we will improve our processes to ensure we can respond more quickly and effectivel­y to these types of concerns in the future,” a Spark spokeswoma­n told the Herald.

“Unfortunat­ely, we are not able to recover Phil’s emails due to the fact he moved them off the platform. While customers can regain access to their Xtra Mail within 90 days of their account being closed, we are unable to recover data that has been moved off our platform by a customer.”

Sheehan said he found the telco’s response “staggering”. He was incredulou­s the telco had no backup of his individual mailbox. He continued to be frustrated he could not reach anyone at Spark to discuss his issues.

Spark launched Xtra Mail as part of an early 1990s partnershi­p with

Yahoo! But after a series of security and spam issues, it switched to the New Zealand-based, Sam Morganback­ed SMX in 2016.

Last month the telco said free Xtra Mail was no longer financiall­y sustainabl­e. From May 16, it would cost Spark broadband customers $5.95 per month and others $9.95 per month.

The spokeswoma­n said: “We would also like to clarify that customers who choose to close their Xtra Mail will not be charged a disconnect­ion fee and will only be charged until the end of the subscripti­on month they cancel in.”

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