Vol. 38 No. 2, March 2004
Index
- Competitive intelligence and records managers.
- Uncovered documents may be trouble for oil company.
- How to recycle or retire your old PC.
- Cuba restricts citizens' web access.
- ID theft tops FTC complaints again.
- Compliance is not cheap, companies say.
- PATRIOT act's reach expanded despite part being struck down.
- Cyber extortion targets office workers.
- Online today, gone tomorrow.
- Evidence of destroyed documents at dairy giant.
- Records clerk arrested for releasing confidential information.
- Report urges better data sharing.
- The worldwide war on spam continues.
- Building a more intelligent police force.
- Homeland security offers alerts warning of e-mail viruses.
- U.S. to start airline background checks.
- Canada's privacy law faces legal challenge: if Canadian courts rule PIPEDA unconstitutional and strike it down, the ramifications for Canadian and worldwide businesses will be profound.
- AmeriVault offers Enhanced Recovery Services Suite.
- Analysis tool from anacubis.
- Evaluate your RIM program with IMA Resource.
- FileNet teams with network appliance.
- Kodak expands scanner line.
- NetXposure launches Image Portal 2.5.
- Providus offers risk management solutions.
- SOA director addresses Sarbanes-Oxley compliance.
- Stellent, Optika merge.
- Strategic information management: continuing need, continuing opportunities.
- Electronic records as evidence: the case for Canada's new standard: when Canada's Electronic Records as Documentary Evidence standard is released later this year, it will represent one big step for electronic records everywhere.
- Competitive intelligence: bridging organizational boundaries: records managers are perfectly positioned to ensure that the appropriate information is identified as key intelligence and is communicated proactively to the organization's decision-makers.
- Competitive intelligence education: competencies, sources, and trends: nearly all organizations are increasingly using competitive intelligence (CI) in their business marketing, planning, and strategizing; however, formal educational offerings in CI are seriously lacking.
- Competitive intelligence in action: how do organizations use competitive intelligence, and what can it mean to their success? Two case studies illustrate different approaches and results.
- Managing e-mail overload.