Vol. 42 No. 5, September 2008
Index
- Big buckets for simplifying records retention schedules.
- Legal implications: for using big buckets.
- Strategies for improving electronic recordkeeping performance.
- The need for speed in the age of rage.
- Tenn. Gov. updates open-records law.
- The digital universe explodes.
- Study: most data breaches preventable.
- Judge: White House office not subject to FOIA.
- Sweden approves warrantless wiretapping.
- GAO: NARA not doing its job.
- Agencies must standardize data labels.
- New Zealand: record updates pricey.
- Iraq records spark controversy.
- Finland makes police archives public.
- NARA prepares for Bush's e-records.
- Agencies urged to change their FOIA data ways.
- Small firms unprepared for disaster.
- California to adopt FRCP--with changes.
- Maine law requires records training.
- Library sues FBI over NSL.
- The Times offers 200 years of history online.
- Hacker leaks six million Chilean private records.
- Tech firms battle info overload.
- E-mail increases firms' legal issues.
- Report: few doctors using EHRs.
- Amassing digital files.
- Secret U.K. documents left on train.
- Bosses can't read employees' messages, court says: in a victory for workplace privacy, an appeals court ruling has made it more difficult for employers to snoop in employees' electronic messages.
- RIM on the hot seat: what to expect when testifying: litigation can be stressful, intrusive, and exhaustive--so it's best to keep deposition and trial testimony simple, short, and honest.
- Techniques for making molehills out of unstructured data mountains: visual analytics, a new technology that graphically illustrates datasets, helps users quickly identify responsive documents for electronic discovery review.
- Skills for building success in the electronic business environment: today's electronic business environment demands that records and information professionals expand their skills but also provides the opportunity for them to have more influence on an organization's success.
- Mapping an approach for successful content management: combining a records management and electronic document management program to create an enterprise content management program produced notable results for the County of San Diego and provided a road map for others to do the same.
- Building a better model for technical problem solving: when an organization develops a practical approach to problem solving, it teaches employees how to overcome barriers and instills in them a desire to accept ownership of problems.
- The secrets to successful archives and records management.