Vol. 43 No. 5, September 2009
Index
- GARP℠: mapping a route for compliance.
- Principles for gaining control of electronic information.
- The imperative for Generally Accepted Recordkeeping Principles™.
- A new content-rich website: more information, more often.
- EU sues Sweden over ISP law.
- State drug database held hostage.
- No love for declassification.
- U.S. history, gone missing.
- A one-stop shop for govt. data.
- Survey: IT professionals don't use passwords.
- CEOs cautious about social networking.
- Dallas to delete e-mail older than 90 days.
- DHS to improve records management.
- Oklahoma opts for open records.
- Apply here, and give us your passwords.
- California fines hospital $250,000 for snooping.
- Swedish court: politicians' texts are public records.
- Texas law overrides HIPAA, court says.
- NARA names new FOIA ombudsman.
- Obama keeps visitor logs under wraps.
- Obama calls for cyber czar.
- U.S. National Archives launches YouTube channel.
- 37% of employees would sell data.
- California mulls abandoned records law.
- Immigrant files to become permanent at NARA.
- NPRC opens six million personnel records.
- IDC: digital data to double every 18 months.
- Lawsuit claims stimulus violates HIPAA.
- Re-tooling for e-discovery technologies, training, and processes: by following five government practices for managing vendors, training employees, and using technology, organizations can better manage their e-discovery process.
- Examining metadata: its role in e-discovery and the future of records managers: recent developments in law, standards, and technology suggest that metadata will play an important part in the evolution of electronic records management.
- To map or not to map: strategies for classifying sources of ESI: while data maps are primarily an electronic discovery tool used to help organizations mitigate their legal risks and costs, they can also help them better meet business objectives.
- Forrester/ARMA survey: mitigating legal risks drives software deployment plans: records professionals have a strategic role to play in implementing systems and processes for meeting regulatory requirements, protecting information assets, and easing e-discovery burdens.
- Shedding light on backup tape e-discovery: new strategies for backing up data and the 2006 amendments to the U.S. Federal Rules of Civil Procedure have led to costly e-discovery nightmares for organizations. A few simple steps can help organizations avoid these horrific situations.
- Where is your data located? Meeting the challenge of e-discovery across the enterprise: this hypothetical case study involving theft of trade secrets discusses data identification and collection issues to be considered and questions to be answered to ensure an effective e-discovery response.
- Shred-it.
- Triadd Software Corporation.