Vol. 44 No. 5, September 2010
Index
- Taking a deep dive into information governance.
- Supreme Court rules on Quon.
- E-mail snafu costs Piper Jaffray $700,000.
- UK agencies withholding more info.
- World investigates Google's data collection.
- Archivist names NDC director.
- E-mail problems still plague gov. agencies.
- Belgian archives raided in abuse inquiry.
- EU reverses itself on data retention.
- Israel tough on illegal data trades.
- Supreme Court: petitions not private.
- CREW questions Obama staff's offsite meetings.
- Supreme Court: PCAOB members can be fired 'at will'.
- Consumers like firms that protect privacy.
- TJX hacker gets 20 years.
- Australia mulls data retention law.
- Brazil's history at risk.
- BP faces court, discovery obligations.
- Mass. begins $110 million data center.
- Court: social networking comments private, in part.
- Red flags rule delayed again.
- Grasping legal holds: what organizations need to know: several high-profile decisions make it clear that courts expect organizations to manage legal holds competently and will issue sanctions against those that do not. Taking the steps outlined in this article will ensure your organization is well-prepared.
- Exploring: data loss prevention systems for legal holds and e-discovery.
- Forrester Research/ARMA International survey: e-discovery and regulatory demands ramp up tech adoption plans: survey results highlight dissatisfaction, major technology purchase plans, and hurdles with complexity, high costs, and synchronization.
- Managing records and information programs: a new blueprint for success.
- RIM lessons from the Brave New World of Business.
- Keys to unlocking an Information Management Compliance Culture.