Vol. 42 No. 1, January 2008
Index
- Public and private, sunshine and reign.
- Sony disk to store 500GB.
- U.K. police need data retention rules.
- FDA records to go digital.
- Washington DOC settles e-records suit.
- Securing Data 101.
- U.K. seeks FOIA Company compliance.
- Germany passes data retention law.
- IM workplace use here to stay.
- Firms not ready for EC directive.
- Survey: lawsuits down, data-saving up.
- 10 reasons to archive e-mail.
- Robot digitizes old books.
- EU firms loath to give U.S. data.
- California data protection law vetoed.
- More e-mail trouble for Morgan Stanley.
- Report: Australia sliding into secrecy.
- Backup data dogging businesses.
- Microsoft offers online health records.
- World digital library moves ahead.
- Government records: it's the message, not the medium: governments--well, some anyway--are starting to figure out what records managers have known all along: Information pertaining to business is a record, whether it was created on or delivered to an office computer or a staff member's personal PDA.
- The importance of architecture in ERM software selection: here are five elements that can help organizations establish well-defined and robust management of all content.
- Breaking for legal holds: how to read the signals: seven scenarios offer examples of events that signal the need to stop disposition of records in anticipation of litigation.
- Wellsprings of change for RIM: six emerging trends affecting information and records management offer challenges and opportunities for RIM professionals.
- Bad bosses and how not to be one: all workplaces would run smoothly if all bosses learned to live by the Golden Rule of Management: manage as you would like to be managed.
- Minimizing risks through a corporate information compliance-initiative: corporate governance programs for information management are a crucial risk-management investment for organizations.