Vol. 38 No. 5, September 2004
Index
- ARMA 2004 Expo Long Beach: the premier event for records and information management professionals.
- ARMA 2004 Long Beach: the premier event for records and information management professionals.
- Conference schedule.
- Exhibitor list.
- Exhibitor profiles.
- Industry intelligence sessions: on the show floor, aisle 100.
- Media sponsors.
- Prizes & giveaways.
- Product category listing.
- Program sponsors.
- Technology application briefings: on the show floor, aisle 100.
- Catalyst or cataclysm?
- FTC nixes "do-not-spam" list.
- Company fined for renting out customer data.
- U.S. scraps CAPPS II.
- California passes online privacy bill.
- You've got mail (and AOL can read it).
- Freedom to Read Amendment fails.
- U.S., Canadian firms have different views of privacy.
- AOL employee charged for stealing screen names.
- IM interoperability--at least for business.
- Don't get "snarfed".
- KM is integral, study says.
- Identity thieves can be locked up for two years.
- Social security digitizes claims process.
- Cops now carry electronic databases.
- Deleted e-mails cost Philip Morris $2.75 million.
- FBI delays virtual file network.
- Tagging toothpaste and toddlers.
- Offshoring privacy: when companies offshore business processes, they are putting consumers' most sensitive personal information at risk--and there's little consumers can do about it.
- DocuVantage adds Web-based document scanning feature.
- FileNet announces team collaboration manager.
- GBS releases e-records system for patient care.
- nextScan releases rollfilm, microfiche scanner.
- Open text, IXOS launch joint offerings.
- SEM offers destruction services.
- Stellent offers integrated e-mail records management.
- Virtual project team solution released.
- From the mouths of CIOs: organizations can meet the biggest challenges facing them today by getting their records management and IT professionals to work together and develop solutions.
- ISO 15489: a tool records management mergers: the global records management standard is a strong, viable 21st-century model that enables the assessment, design, and implementation of a new, post-merger corporate records management program.
- Investing wisely for the future: calculating the return on investment can be useful in supporting the development and implementation of an effective records management program.
- Two approaches to managing information risks: when managing information risks, is it better to use an event-based or a records and information requirements-based approach? This excerpt from Managing Risks for Records and Information explores these approaches and examines how to choose the one that best fits your organization's needs.
- An enterprise content management primer: ECM is increasingly important in helping organizations manage and control content according to their business goals and legal needs.
- Protecting your digital sources.
- Assigning a bottom-line value to information.
- Implementing a unified content strategy.