Vol. 46 No. 4, July 2012
Index
- Focus on personal development to ensure success.
- Criminal courts finally address ESI issues.
- Portugal modernizes by considering 'terabyte tax'.
- 'Unphotocopying' soon to be an alternative to recycling?
- U.S. Court of Appeals takes stance on stolen data.
- Google continues to come under fire for privacy issues.
- Transparency on the campaign trail.
- FBI asks Internet companies' cooperation in wire tapping.
- New York Public Library launches digitization project.
- Canada cuts library and archives budget.
- New UK cookie law now in effect.
- New Jersey takes lead in e-discovery.
- Pipeline companies must keep safety records.
- Health records take beating on security.
- On the (health) record.
- Cloud computing slow to take off.
- Data breaches may be up, but costs are down.
- Court orders mirror image of defendants' personal computers.
- Survey finds attitudes toward intellectual property changing.
- 'Perfect storm' of IT trends is brewing.
- E-mail archiving on the increase.
- Cyber experts red flag online voting.
- Holographic storage readies for market.
- Step up to get a seat at the table: learning to speak the same language as legal, IT, and executive management is the first step toward being included in strategic discussions around information governance. ......
- Turning the ship around with a four-generation crew: for the first time in history, organizations have four generations of employees working side-by-side. Understanding each generation's distinct life experiences and the varying world views, values, work styles, and motivations they produced is key to getting them all on board for a successful records management program implementation.
- 8 tips for raising data from the dead: retaining the original software and hardware used to create electronic date cannot guarantee its survival. Those who have neglected to properly convert and migrate their important information to ensure its availability will find solace and solutions in this article's suggestions for its recovery.
- Getting buy-in for your information governance program.
- Standards for establishing records and information management programs: organizations that don't already have a records and information management (RIM) program, as well as those whose programs have lapsed for lack of monitoring and updating and those that have been affected by the introduction of new technologies, should consider using RIM standards and best practices as a foundation for their programs.
- The Lone Arranger: getting the full picture of professional archivists' work.