Vol. 43 No. 3, May 2009
Index
- Committing to good information governance.
- Wal-Mart to roll out e-health records.
- Swiss Bank to open secret files.
- White House names first CIO.
- B.C. criticized for slow response to FOI requests.
- Iowa governor scrutinized over personal e-mail use.
- NAGARA launches online library.
- New details emerge on George W. Bush library.
- Federal agency spends $6 million on e-discovery.
- Survey gives states mixed review on transparency.
- Australia's legal system gets e-discovery rules.
- Finland approves e-mail tracking law.
- E-discovery firm can't find its e-mails.
- HIPAA violation costs CVS $2.25 million.
- Wikileaks posts Congressional reports.
- FCC warns telecom firms to protect data.
- Mayor Nagin confirms 2008 e-mails were deleted.
- BSI releases IM standards.
- Facebook cancels changes to user rules.
- Lawmakers propose Internet Safety Act.
- New chief to tackle VA paper problems.
- Departing workers often take proprietary company data.
- In Massachusetts: $14k too much for student records.
- UK's 30-year rule should be halved, inquiry finds.
- CIA destroyed interrogation tapes.
- Cologne archive building collapses.
- Apples & oranges: recordkeeping principles for transforming business practices.
- The building blocks of a global records management program: What does it take to build a global, enterprisewide RM program? it starts with equal parts planning, management support, and foresight.
- Selecting software for managing physical a electronic records: although most records are created electronically, physical records continue to proliferate and demand that organizations seek software solutions that meet the requirements for effectively managing records in both media.
- Getting from point A to point B: what it means to take a federated approach.
- Guiding your organization through murky waters: defining your retention management program.