Records Management
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Transcript Records Management
Trends (and Some Issues) in Electronic
Records Management
William Saffady, Professor
College of Information and Computer Science
Long Island University
Important characteristics of electronic records
Contains machine-readable rather than human-readable
information
Information originates as electronic signal
Any type of information
Quantitative data
Character-coded text
Images
Sound
Electronically encoded: digital or analog
Important characteristics of electronic records
Originating devices
Computers of all types
Scientific and medical instrumentation
Video recorders
Audio recorders
Obsolete devices
Physical forms
Magnetic media
Optical media
Other
Issues and Concerns
Growth of electronic records
Quantity: paper vs. electronic records
The cause: proliferation of information processing technology:
computers, storage, software
E-business and E-government initiatives
Importance of electronic records
Many support mission-critical applications
Computers automate most important activities, store most
valuable information
Computer records more complete than source documents
Issues and Concerns
Inadequate controls for creation, storage, retention
Computers are commonplace but operational
guidelines are rare
Many records management decisions guided
by user discretion
Information redundancy
Same information in electronic and non-electronic
formats -- the problem of “official copies”
Problems of space, control, coordination of
retention actions
Issues and Concerns
System dependence
Hardware
Software
Media stability
Data migration requirements
Periodic recopying of media
Periodic conversion of records to new file formats
Remote access: an advantage and a security problem
Issues and Concerns
E-discovery issues
The duty to preserve evidence in all formats
Amended Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
Broadens discovery process to include records of all types
Electronic records must be produced in usable format
Attorneys must understand electronic recordkeeping
infrastructure
Accessibility of backup copies, archived copies, legacy
data
Some Ideas and Trends
The declining cost of storage
Do retention guidelines play an important role in cost
reduction?
Are retention actions cost-justifiable?
Concept of Total Cost of Ownership for electronic
storage -- is purging more expensive than keeping?
Cost consequences of indefinite retention beyond
storage costs
The problem of email and fileshares
Problem of discretionary retention
Does a uniform maximum retention period make sense?
Some Ideas and Trends
Electronic records as official copies
Definition
Advantages: compactness, reusability, backup
Complications for long retention
Data migration requirements
Keeping legacy systems in service
“Born digital” vs. conversion of paper records to digital
formats for retention
Some Ideas and Trends
Software solutions
Email “vaults”
Records management application software
Concept -- relationship to document management
software
Role of DoD 5015.2-STD
Preconditions for successful implementation
Retention schedules cover electronic records
File taxonomy to organize records
Document management software for active records
Automatic categorization