Vol. 42 No. 6, November 2008
Index
- After the bailout: RIM's critical role.
- Border agents may seize laptops.
- Next president to inherit e-mail problem.
- Texas AG makes firms pay for breaches.
- Employees need help managing e-mail.
- La. schools get $2.4 million to restore records.
- Planned database sale worries Iowans.
- Report: states should prioritize e-records.
- 11 nations develop global standards.
- Court upholds SOX challenge.
- The SEC's IDEA: replace EDGAR.
- Report: Gonzales mishandled sensitive data.
- New records standards for New Zealand.
- Poll: people don't trust EHRs.
- Officials crack largest ID theft ring ever.
- U.K. lauches $6 million archiving system.
- Pennsylvania launches govt. e-library.
- Poll: e-discovery worries execs.
- IBM invests $300 million in disaster recovery.
- Record data breaches in 2008.
- Cheney sued over records.
- Kentucky drowning in records.
- Archivists assist Israel, Palestine.
- Study: U.S. ranks third in e-gov.
- Records & information management in the post-bailout world: the backlash from the U.S. financial market crisis is sure to include a rush to legislation, regulation, and litigation that will present a host of new compliance and discovery challenges that organizations should begin preparing for today.
- How to create a security culture in your organization: a recent study reveals the importance of assessment, incident response procedures, and social engineering testing in improving security awareness programs.
- The ingredients of a good leader: from analyzing the tasks at hand to balancing individual and team efforts, a leader must always be a motivator.
- Driving better business performance with document management processes: a recent survey suggests how organizations can align their document management processes with their business goals.
- American National Standards and the RIM industry: a primer: standards are important to the records and information management (RIM) industry, and American National Standards should play an increasingly prominent role in the industry's ongoing quest for quality.
- CMS, RMS? Spelling out the right information management solution: organizations sifting through an alphabet soup of information management solutions must understand their specific needs and the strengths and weaknesses of each type of solution to choose the one--or combination of solutions--that will best meet their needs.