Vol. 43 No. 1, January 2009
Index
- Here's to a prosperous New Year!(IN FOCUS: A Message from the Editors) (Editorial)
- IT executives still resist e-mail archiving.
- Obama presidency will be 'wired'.
- State Dept. staff snoop in passport records.
- Mass. passes tough data security law.
- Top-secret files sold with camera.
- Chinese hackers crack White House network.
- Good compliance cuts legal costs.
- Patient IDs would improve healthcare.
- U.S. agencies work toward digitization guidelines.
- Lawyers: e-discovery drives up court costs.
- NARA joins World Digital Library.
- Historic records saved from scrap pile.
- UK wants "black boxes" to record citizens' Internet use.
- Federal CIOs announce new committee.
- NASCIO Awards Outstanding State IT projects.
- Most data breaches involve paper.
- NARA records center set for St. Louis.
- SEC fines financial firm $275,000.
- Australian doctors must turn over patient records.
- Nevada mandates e-data encryption.
- Xerox offers self-erasing paper.
- A walk in the cloud: Internet- or "cloud"-based tools, are making their way--sanctioned or not--into more and more workplaces. Two records management experts suggest how organizations can leverage their benefits while mitigating their risks.
- Web 2.0: benefits & considerations.
- Web 2.0: issues & risks.
- Selecting the right tools for records management: SharePoint is popular as a collaboration tool, but is it robust enough for managing records enterprise-wide?
- Will red flags detour ID theft? The new "red flag" rules under the U.S. Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA) going into effect May 1 require U.S. banks and creditors to implement a program to identify, mitigate, and prevent potential consumer identity theft.
- Writing for professional development and for the profession: the RIM field needs its professionals to write and contribute to the field's knowledge, but many do not do so because they are not aware of many basic, helpful tools available to them.
- Making the most of your historical assets: re-evaluating archival records and their place in history can open the door to new awareness, promotion, and publicity for any organization.
- Rethinking records management for the Web 2.0 world.