PROMOTING COMMUNITY AWARENESS OF RECORDS MANAGEMENT & INFORMATION GOVERNANCE
Boise Valley ARMA BACK TO IT! MONTHLY WEBINAR Monday | October 25th, 2021 12:00 - 1:00 p.m. Cost: This event is FREE!
Information Governance in the Remote and Hybrid Business Environment During the pandemic, every business that could "go remote" did so, often suddenly and without a lot of advance planning. Employees found themselves working from home or quarantine locations using an array of home-grown and third-party applications that got them through the day, with
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little consideration for the long-term records and information management consequences: Where is our data being stored? How secure are our files? How can we retrieve our data and records later? What formats are data being managed or stored in? Are important business data being stored on employees' home computers, mobile phones, and tablets? The remote and hybrid working environment is likely here to stay, and RIM
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professionals need to understand what is going on and how it can be effectively governed. Ken Withers is the Deputy Executive Director of The Sedona Conference and its Corporate Secretary. Since 1989, he has published several widely-distributed papers on electronic discovery, hosted a popular website on electronic discovery and electronic records management issues, and given presentations at more than 500 conferences and workshops for legal, records management, and industry audiences. Among his publications are Ephemeral Data and
Ken Withers
the Duty to Preserve Discoverable Electronically Stored Information in the University of Baltimore Law Review (2008); Living Daily with Weekley Homes in the Texas State Bar Advocate (Summer 2010); and Risk Aversion, Risk Management, and the Overpreservation Problem in Electronic Discovery in the South Carolina Law Review (2013). From 1999 through 2005, he was a Senior Education Attorney at the Federal Judicial Center in Washington D.C., where he developed Internet-based distance learning programs for the federal judiciary concentrating on issues of technology and the administration of justice. Ken also contributed to several well-known FJC publications, including the Manual for Complex Litigation, Fourth Edition (2004), Effective Use of Courtroom Technology (2001), and the Civil Litigation Management Manual (2001). ©2021 BOISE VALLEY ARMA