Vol. 44 No. 6, November 2010
Index
- Moving the profession--and the professional--forward in 2011.
- Governments ban BlackBerry service.
- NARA: 8 million pages down, 392 million to go.
- NY lawmakers want governors to archive records.
- SMBs getting serious about security.
- Canadian judge chides RCMP for destroying evidence.
- Website boasts 800 years of UK laws.
- Court approves posting of SSNs.
- DHS's cybersecurity role expanded.
- CREW: Bush White House unconcerned about e-mails.
- Social networks pose e-discovery risks.
- Bank of America settles data theft suits.
- Illinois enacts E-Records Act.
- Bankrupt magazine must destroy subscriber data.
- Boston: no charges in e-mail destruction case.
- Miami records held in fee dispute.
- Philly clerk allegedly sold city records.
- Obama move reignites surveillance fears.
- Michigan finalizing social media policy.
- Survey: chasm between legal, IT growing.
- Federal Register gets update.
- Symantec global study: over-retention is risky.
- Rite Aid pays $1 million for violating HIPAA.
- Schools putting kids' SSNs at risk.
- Drafting a 'dream team' to prevent e-discovery nightmares: RIM professionals are in a unique position to help their organizations prevent electronic discovery problems. But, this requires them to take the lead in facilitating coordination and cooperation among RIM, IT, and legal staff.
- Making the case for merging document control and records management.
- Harnessing the winds of change.
- Computing in the cloud: Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution.
- Preserving Archives and Manuscripts for long-term, uninterrupted access.