Entries categorized under “Information Governance”
6 result(s) displayed (1 - 6 of 6):
The recent Quon v. Arch Wireless decision has raised many questions about a company's ability and right to monitor employee communications. Fortunately, a deeper read shows that the real issues centered around the employee's reasonable expectation of privacy, which a well documented and communicated policy solves handily. So an employee might ask, "I know that the company owns my email, but do they really read it?" (read more)
In looking back at the earliest generations of Information Lifecycle Management (ILM), Business Analytics and Data Loss Prevention (DLP) products, we can see a wasteland of interesting technology that was too early for the market. We are now seeing the hints of resurgence in products adjacent to enterprise discovery based on the 'secondary benefits' of corporate archiving, preservation and collection. Basically, corporations seem to be recognizing that the infrastructure required to establish an efficient, defensible discovery process can and should be leveraged to provide other business functionality. (read more)
The State of Texas recently passed H.B. No. 2833 stating you must hold a license as a security services contractor if you "engage in business activity in which a license is required." The law then outlines that a company acts as an "Investigations Company" under Section 1702.104, (4) (b) "...includes information obtained or furnished through the review and analysis of, and the investigation into the content of, computer-based data not available to the public." Investigation is a key word in the statute and appears to be broadly defined and it has lead to confusion and controversy.
(read more)
This is delivered by marrying efficient resources, high-speed review applications and proactive project and process management. We also use higher level strategies, such as our Dynamic Data Analysis™ (a blending of statistical, conceptual and legal analysis), to both identify relevant documents as quickly and cost-effectively as possible, and to simultaneously reduce the total amount of data required to be reviewed. (read more)
The legal (but somewhat impractical) issue is pretty straightforward here---what industry you're in will determine the regulatory and legal requirements for you. Since relatively few industries are subjected to substantial regulatory/legal requirements for preservation, the question of retention of most records is, often, a balance between the benefit of end user access, aka knowledge management, contrasted against the burdens of data retention expense and potential legal production obligations. (read more)
Processes that fluctuate according to the needs of the business, department and staff result in unique and unstructured content. The content and processes require a special type of handling, in the form of Intelligent Archiving. The archiving and ECM markets need to radically change their perception of solutions to these unstructured data problems. In an attempt to address this Autonomy is announcing Autonomy Information Governance, the first intelligent information governance platform. Their plan, according to their press release, is to address three cost and risk oriented business processes. (read more)