Vol. 46 No. 3, May 2012
Index
- Mobile usage raises information governance, data security concerns.
- Conn. high court: public universities can withhold records.
- NARA may miss declassification deadline.
- EHRs: now there's an app for that.
- Watchdogs criticize new Google privacy policy.
- IBM researchers store a bit on 12 atoms.
- NY courts push statewide e-filing.
- ERA costs may hit $1b, GAO says.
- Judge issues opinion on computer-assisted review.
- Ikea paid firm to spy on customers, staff.
- Stolen NASA laptop breached, IG says.
- Coming soon: Google glasses.
- NY court: producing party should pay discovery costs.
- China issues data protection regulation.
- Videoconferencing vulnerable, security expert says.
- Employers, colleges demand Facebook passwords.
- Closed-loop records management: the stakes are too high to ignore.
- Megaupload shutdown reveals cloud risk.
- Supreme Court: GPS tracker violated privacy.
- Courts rule for, against hard drive decryption.
- Search firms to mine tweets.
- White House proposes consumer bill of rights.
- It's most important role: ensuring information integrity.
- Future watch: strategies for long-term preservation of electronic records.
- Drawing a blueprint for a scalable taxonomy: drawing on the basic concepts of biological classification most studied in high school, this article describes how to develop a scalable taxonomy that can migrate to any content repository--from share drives to enterprise content management systems.
- ARMA International 2012 Conference & Expo: September 23-25, Chicago.
- ARMA International buyer's guide: vendors at your fingertips.
- DHS Worldwide Software Solutions. Total Recall information management software.
- Your information governance: join industry analyst Barclay T. Blair in video whitepaper, sponsored by RSD.
- Smartphone technologies shine spotlight on information governance: to address strategic planning issues, collaborate more effectively with IT personnel, and position records and information management (RIM) for greater organizational success, RIM professionals must stay current with technological changes. Communications technologies--and smartphones, in particular--have changed the way business is done.
- Effective information governance is power.
- High-level blueprint for private sector information governance programs.