Explainedback-iconCybersecurity 101back-iconWhat is a Legal Hold in Cybersecurity?

What is a Legal Hold in Cybersecurity?

A legal hold is a process that preserves electronically stored information (ESI), documents, communications, and other records that may be relevant to legal investigations, litigation, audits, or regulatory proceedings. Organizations use legal hold procedures to prevent the deletion, modification, or destruction of important data during ongoing legal or compliance matters. Legal hold management helps organizations maintain evidence integrity and support regulatory accountability across operational environments.

Why do organizations implement legal holds?

Organizations generate large volumes of emails, documents, messages, logs, and business records across multiple systems and devices. During legal disputes or investigations, certain information may become important evidence.

Legal holds commonly apply to:

Data type Example use case
Emails and communications Internal investigation records
Employee documents HR or compliance disputes
System logs Security or access investigations
Financial records Regulatory or audit reviews
Cloud-stored files Litigation support

Preserving this information helps organizations avoid accidental deletion or modification of evidence during active legal matters.

What risks affect improper legal hold management?

Weak legal hold processes can create legal, operational, and compliance risks. If organizations fail to preserve required information properly, they may face regulatory penalties, reputational damage, or evidentiary challenges.

Organizations commonly face risks such as:

  • Accidental deletion of relevant records
  • Inconsistent retention enforcement
  • Limited visibility into stored data
  • Unauthorized modification of evidence
  • Weak access governance
  • Incomplete audit trails

These issues become more difficult to manage in distributed environments where employees use multiple devices and cloud services.

How do organizations maintain legal hold workflows?

Legal hold management requires coordination between legal, compliance, IT, and security teams. Organizations often combine retention policies, access controls, and centralized oversight to maintain consistent evidence preservation.

Operational workflows commonly include:

  • Identifying relevant custodians and systems
  • Preserving required records and communications
  • Restricting unauthorized deletion or modification
  • Maintaining audit visibility across environments
  • Monitoring compliance with hold requirements
  • Reviewing retention and preservation policies regularly

These practices help organizations maintain stronger control over legally sensitive information.

Why does endpoint visibility matter during legal holds?

Legal hold processes often involve data stored across laptops, mobile devices, cloud applications, and collaboration platforms. Limited endpoint visibility can make it difficult to locate or preserve relevant records consistently.

Organizations commonly rely on:

  • Centralized policy enforcement
  • Device compliance management
  • Controlled access workflows
  • Audit-friendly operational oversight
  • Secure device administration
  • Consistent retention governance

Strong visibility helps organizations maintain more reliable preservation practices across distributed operational environments.

How Hexnode supports operational compliance workflows

Organizations managing sensitive records across distributed endpoints often require centralized policy enforcement and operational oversight. Hexnode supports compliance workflows through:

  • Device compliance management
  • Application restrictions and policy enforcement
  • Certificate and VPN configuration
  • Access configuration controls
  • Secure onboarding and offboarding workflows

For environments where suspicious activity or unauthorized access requires investigation, Hexnode XDR, meanwhile, helps analysts review endpoint activity, examine incident context, scan managed devices, restart endpoints remotely, update agents, and use remote terminal access during response workflows.

FAQs

No. Organizations also use legal holds during regulatory investigations, compliance reviews, internal audits, and security-related inquiries.

No. A legal hold preserves relevant information and prevents deletion or modification while the hold remains active.

Centralized visibility helps organizations identify, preserve, and manage relevant records consistently across distributed systems and endpoints.