Vol. 39 No. 3, May 2005
Index
- ARMA '05: Chicago: celebrating 50 years: focusing on the business and technology of managing records and information.
- Correction.
- The Age of information vulnerability.
- Workplace E-mail, IM Survey reveals risks.
- SEC extends SOX deadline for foreign companies.
- Whistleblower complaints growing.
- Electronic medical records' risks feared.
- Competitive intelligence underutilized.
- Deleting spam costs businesses billions.
- Weinstein becomes ninth U.S. archivist.
- Document management drives innovation.
- Bush, Clinton libraries release records.
- FDA issues recordkeeping rule.
- Australian patient records exempt from privacy law.
- Nations join to combat cross-border spam.
- Please, don't save everything.
- U.K. banks get new compliance rules.
- Cybersecurity report reveals weaknesses.
- Database debacles: individuals' privacy is rapidly eroding as more and more of their most intimate information is collected and sold by data brokers that have little oversight and few restrictions.
- CalDocs software supports new forms.
- Conquer information overload with Ultra Recall.
- DocuLex offers Goby Capture version 2.3.
- GP software announces directory Opus 8.0.
- l releases RS-SQL 2.07.
- Open Text introduces e-mail management platform.
- Vasont Content Management System integrates with Word.
- Stand & deliver: for records and information management professionals, now is the time for self-assessment, professional betterment, and business execution.
- Who owns business data on personally owned computers?
- Creating order out of chaos with taxonomies: the increasing volume of electronic records and the frequency with which those records change require the development and implementation of taxonomies--a classification system of topics or subject categories--to maximize efficient retrieval of records for legal, business, and regulatory purposes.
- The impact of the USA PATRIOT Act on records management: the impact of the USA PATRIOT Act on a particular records manager or records management program depends largely on the industry in which it operates.
- A records management program that works for archives: clearly defining records management responsibilities ensures the capture of significant records and facilitates their transition to archival custody and use.
- Sites every RIM professional should know.
- New ways to think about work.