Vol. 37 No. 6, November 2003
Index
- RIM professionals of the future.
- Senate votes to divert NARA's e-archives funds to Amtrak.
- Swiss ISPs must keep e-mail log for six months.
- Documents shredded while you watch.
- Survey reveals disaster recovery expectations and reality.
- Einstein online.
- India to adopt data privacy rules.
- Information databases aid investigators.
- Are you addicted to the Internet?
- Dangerous documents.
- Convicted spy buried sensitive U.S defense documents in 19 locations.
- Court rules trade secrets outweigh free speech.
- E-gov initiatives making strides.
- Canada and U.S. Internet usage.
- Want the CIA director's address? Get it for $26 online.
- Identity theft victims skyrocket, surveys say.
- EPA awards $2 million for environmental data-sharing.
- New database reveals details of state's earliest court cases.
- Keeping an eye on Sarbanes-Oxley: the Sarbanes-Oxley Act is creating an ever-evolving new landscape for corporate governance, making it critical organizations worldwide to pay attention.
- Accutrac offers Dynamic RIM software system.
- CD features destruction-equipment catalog.
- GlobalSCAPE adds DocuComp engine.
- IMR announces MailStore.
- Open Text offers compliance platform.
- Software combines e-mail, file management.
- Stellent launches Sarbanes-Oxley Solution.
- Yaletown simplifies E-mail management.
- IM: invaluable new business tool or records management nightmare? Instant messaging's free-form nature is presenting risks and challenges for business and records managers everywhere.
- Electronic discovery in 2010: the past 10 years have proved that the escalating costs of data collection and review in discovery of the systems themselves, demand a major realignment of how business data is maintained.
- Managing electronic records in the 21st century: as Michigan's State Archives and Records Management Services discovered, records management application (RMA) software can solve many electronic recordkeeping problems, but it also presents many challenges.
- Knowledge conversion is the key to success: businesses that know how to convert information into knowledge will be more successful than those that do not. The same is true for information technology companies.
- Making the executive presentation: senior executives' information needs require a unique approach, but it is critical to learn how to get their attention.
- E-mail rules for records managers.
- A new textbook for records management practice.