Vol. 40 No. 6, November 2006
Index
- Shoot for the moon ... or beyond.
- More SOX delays for some firms.
- Ontario court papers costly.
- AOL exposes search records.
- Password paralysis.
- States, localities weak on e-records management.
- Census records boost website offerings to five million names for research.
- Singapore tests intelligent e-filing system.
- Court: Delaware must open public records.
- Does FACTA go far enough?
- Court: records retention policy, litigation can coexist.
- Wear your vital records.
- IDC: disk-based data protection to explode.
- Irish history online.
- Florida County to move case files online.
- Software market continues consolidation.
- Whistleblowers allege insurance cheat.
- Ad-hoc data quality processes don't cut it.
- Iron Mountain facilities burn.
- Financial aid records searched after 9/11.
- From hand to hard drive.
- Canadian Commissioner announces RFID guidelines.
- Cell phone secrets revealed.
- New rules for E-discovery: new amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure may make electronic discovery easier and less costly for corporations.
- Disaster recovery resource now available online.
- New scanner designed for color duplex scanning.
- NextPage introduces risk assessment tool.
- Stellent SOX tool helps streamline compliance.
- Upgraded compliance tool offers several enhancements.
- Xythos adds RM function to EDMS new release.
- 8 steps to develop a taxonomy: as the foundation for all activities within the corporation relating to documents, a taxonomy can further a wide range of corporate objectives, such as enabling business processes, protecting intellectual property, and building the foundation for compliance. Developing a taxonomy requires the guidance of records management, IT, legal, compliance and the involvement of every business unit.
- ISO 17799: standard for security: organizations can use ISO 17799 as a model for creating information security policies and procedures, assigning roles and responsibilities, documenting operational procedures, preparing for incident and business continuity management, and complying with legal requirements and audit controls.
- Strategies for RIM Program compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley: the goal of any publicly traded company, or any other organization that, for whatever reason, views itself as subject to a similar requirement, should be to become compliant with Sarbanes-Oxley.
- Taking the trauma out of the talk: records and information management professionals need not fear speaking before an audience if they put planning and thought into their presentations.
- Mitigating the risks of messaging: recognizing and addressing the dangers of the casual nature of electronic messaging will minimize organizational risk. Putting an electronic communications plan in place is vital to protecting a company's reputation, its business interests, and its compliance success.
- E-records for government doers.