Vol. 44 No. 3, May 2010
Index
- Data multiplies as storage costs fall.
- Rosenthal rules on Rimkus.
- It's not easy being transparent.
- Visiting the rotunda? Leave camera at home.
- CIO council wins dubious award.
- Texas Metro Transit Authority broke records law.
- FTC: data leaked to P2P networks.
- UK embraces cloud computing.
- Mass. data security law is nation's toughest.
- More using social media at work.
- Hackers seeking trade secrets.
- PATRIOT Act provisions renewed.
- Citibank exposes 600,000 SSNs.
- German court overturns data retention law.
- Breaches cost $204 per record.
- Tips for protecting business data.
- Britain doesn't want UFO reports.
- French court: employers can read employee e-mail.
- DoD allows flash drive, social media use.
- Saving Haiti's past.
- Constabulary to monitor employees.
- Sweden's data retention delays must end.
- City hands over residents' e-mails.
- Truckers sue DOT over recordkeeping.
- Tips for growing a green organization: all records managers should think about the business benefits of greening their RIM program, which can contribute to an organization's bottom line and make it a better corporate citizen. By consuming as few resources as possible and retaining only those records that are necessary, an organization saves loads of money, time, and energy.
- Can RIM save the world? The role electronic records management plays in promoting a greener work environment: if you think that saving the world is a job for Superman, think again. Records and information management (RIM) professionals hold a pivotal role in promoting environmental sustainability and helping their organizations "go green.".
- Cleaning up your information wasteland.
- Save time and money with automated process to extract relevant ESI from tape.
- Growing a Greener Data Center: is the data really greener on the other side?
- Emerging trends of electronic recordkeeping: a public policy perspective.