Vol. 45 No. 6, November 2011
Index
- Are you ready? Getting back to business after a disaster.
- Correction.
- Delaware Court focuses on 'unallocated space'.
- GSA moves e-mail to the cloud.
- Survey: managers unaware of IT data access.
- Cyber breaches hit 90% of U.S. firms.
- Illinois: law targets recurrent records requesters.
- SEC accused of destroying records.
- Texas grants access to 'Archaic records'.
- India passes data privacy rules.
- UK ends 11b [pounds sterling] EHRs system.
- Calif. amends data breach law.
- German Court: employers can review employees e-mails.
- Data centers using less power.
- Florida reaped $73 million selling personal data.
- Agencies need better social media rules.
- German official dislikes Facebook 'Like' button.
- Governor's missing e-mails prompt probe.
- U.S. to shred millions of court records.
- Some hospitals stuck between digital, paper medical records.
- White House names new CIO.
- Social media mishaps cost firms $4 million in 2010.
- Emergency! How to build a document unit for hazardous incident response: though each industry has a unique set of data and operations, organizations can adapt general records and information management guidelines and procedures to use as the foundation for building a highly skilled document unit to respond to hazardous incidents.
- Rule 30[b][6] deposition mystery revealed: what records professionals need to know: the legal department called. Your organization is being sued, and the other party wants to depose a records manager and that's you. Now what? Don't panic. Be prepared.
- Leveraging GARP[R] to ensure employee engagement.
- How to avoid disaster: RIM's crucial role in business continuity planning.
- Dodd-Frank Act Puts Focus on Information Governance: as a result of the Dodd-Frank Act, many organizations should consider revising their current business and compliance practices to satisfy regulatory reporting requirements.
- Lifting the fog on cloud computing.