Vol. 41 No. 5, September 2007
Index
- Conference agenda.
- Conference registration.
- Demand is high for new skills innovative technology, & collaboration. Are you ready?
- Hear from the experts.
- Meet your peers.
- Of special interest.
- Pre-conference seminars.
- Get serious about e-discovery.
- FOIA request backlog decades old.
- RAM ruling raises privacy issues.
- Ex-Boeing employee stole 320,000 files.
- NARA intern gets 15 months for theft.
- 5 million records exposed each month.
- VP challenges classified data order.
- Minnesota enacts e-health law.
- Law firm offers online privacy library.
- Yale U. press to publish Stalin's library.
- PIPEDA compliance improving slowly.
- Secrecy costs $541,000 in WA.
- EU adopts Prum Treaty.
- Japanese bank loses 1 million records.
- UK National archives, Microsoft working to access old file formats.
- Data security challenges small firms.
- Agencies take steps to safeguard data.
- Google reduces data retention period.
- SEC appoints first archivist.
- ChoicePoint lessons learned.
- Livescribe offers pen-based computer.
- Data management problems widespread: organizations should regard data as their greatest asset--and invest in data management accordingly.
- Clarification.
- Authentic digital records: laying the foundation for evidence: a foundation for proving that records submitted as evidence are reliable, usable, and have integrity is built with policies and procedures based on standards and best practices--and documentation that shows they have been followed.
- Managing the cycle of change: Resisting change is normal, but it is problematic for organizations looking to make changes or implement new technologies.
- Redesigning the ReliefWeb: the redesign process of the humanitarian community's main information management system provides a model and lessons for others contemplating a website redesign.
- Legal records managers: ready for electronic prime time? Legal records managers working for firms that still rely on paper information systems must take the lead to move their firms into the electronic age.
- Preparing for tomorrow with strategic enterprise services today: one Fortune 100 corporation decided to employ strategic enterprise services to better manage the retention, disposition, and access to business records and operational data.
- 10 critical decisions for successful e-discovery: the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure's recent emphasis on producing electronically stored information requires that the e-discovery team understands the collection and processing choices to be made--and their ramifications.
- Mass collaboration changes everything.
- Pondering theoretical recordkeeping.