Discussion - Information Governance(Reflection Activity) - Computer Science
Note: Please write as per the attached course syllabus and textbook.
In the last week of class, we are going to complete a reflection activity.
This discussion topic is to be reflective and will be using your own words and not a compilation of direct citations from other papers or sources. You can use citations in your posts, but this discussion exercise should be about what you have learned through your viewpoint and not a re-hash of any particular article, topic, or the book.
Items to include in your initial thread:
“Interesting Assignments” - What were some of the more interesting assignments to you?
“Interesting Readings” - What reading or readings did you find the most interesting and why? “Interesting Readings”
“Perspective” - How has this course changed your perspective?
“Course Feedback” - What topics or activities would you add to the course, or should we focus on some areas more than others?
School of Computer and Information Sciences
COURSE SYLLABUS
Course Information
ITS833 - M20 Information Governance Summer 2021 Full Term
Course Format: Hybrid CRN: 31442
Course Description
This course presents key issues related to the discipline of information governance and how it is being applied to electronic document and records management, email, social media, cloud computing, mobile computing, and, in fact, the management and output of information organization-wide. IG leverages information technologies to enforce policies, procedures and controls to manage information risk in compliance with legal and litigation demands, external regulatory requirements, and internal governance objectives. Information Governance: Concepts, Strategies, and Best Practices reveals how, and why, to utilize IG and leverage information technologies to control, monitor, and enforce information access and security policies.
Course Objectives
Upon completion of this course:
Students will be able to compare and contrast information governance, IT governance and data governance.
Students will be able to understand information governance principles
Students will be able to understand strategic planning and best practices for information governance
Students will be able to understand information governance policy development
Learner Outcomes
Learn how to perform research identifying and analyzing technological challenge
Build critical thinking skills to develop and apply solutions that achieve strategic and tactical IT-business alignment
Develop professional skills and expertise to advance knowledge in your chosen field or discipline within information technology
Conduct research with professional and ethical integrity
Address complex technical questions and challenge established knowledge and practices in the area
Identify, comprehend, analyze, evaluate and synthesize research
Communicate effectively and employ constructive professional and interpersonal skills
Critically evaluate current research and best practices
Demonstrate Governance leadership skills at the team and enterprise levels following tenets of professional, social, and ethical responsibility
Recommend Governance strategies that support enterprise mission and objectives
Course Website
Access to the course website is required via the iLearn portal on the University of the Cumberlands website:
http://www.ucumberlands.edu/ilearn/
or
https://ucumberlands.blackboard.com/
Required Books and Resources
Title: Academic Writer
Website:
http://ucumberlands.libguides.com/c.php?g=504168
About: This is APAs resource for APA format, style, citations, and document types (like how to write a literature review). UC has a dedicated link for students to create their Academic Writer account, and that link can be found here
Title: Information Governance
ISBN: 9781118421017
Authors: Robert F. Smallwood Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Publication Date: 2014-03-28
Course Required text can be found and purchased via the UC Barnes and Noble Bookstore:
https://cumber.bncollege.com/shop/cumberlands/page/find-textbooks
Suggested Books and Resources
Writing Center
Website:
https://www.ucumberlands.edu/learningcommons/writingcenter
About: This website includes beginning information about the Writing Center. Look for The Learning Commons in your class list in iLearn. Once you open The Learning Commons course, look for the Writing Center on the left menu bar
Writing Center
Subtitle: This website includes beginning information about the Writing Center. Look for The Learning Commons in your class list in iLearn. Once you open The Learning Commons course, look for the Writing Center on the left menu bar.
Publisher: https://www.ucumberlands.edu/learningcommons/writingcenter
Academic Writer
Website:
http://ucumberlands.libguides.com/c.php?g=504168
About: This is APAs resource for APA format, style, citations, and document types (like how to write a literature review). UC has a dedicated link for students to create their Academic Writer account, and that link can be found here
Academic Writer
Subtitle: This is APAs resource for APA format, style, citations, and document types (like how to write a literature review). UC has a dedicated link for students to create their Academic Writer account
Publisher: http://ucumberlands.libguides.com/c.php?g=504168
The Learning Commons (TLC)
Website:
http://ucumberlands.libguides.com/c.php?g=504168
About: TLC is here to help you succeed in your courses, from your first day at Cumberlands through completing your degree.TLC offers a variety of academic resources both virtually and in-person that are informal and with qualified Academic Fellows.
The Learning Commons (TLC)
Subtitle: The Learning Commons (TLC) is here to help you succeed in your courses, from your first day at Cumberlands through completing your degree.TLC offers a variety of academic resources both virtually and in-person that are informal and with qualified Academic Fellows. ucumberlands.libguides.com
Publisher: http://ucumberlands.libguides.com/c.php?g=504168
Grammarly
Website:
https://www.grammarly.com/
About: Compose bold, clear, mistake-free writing with Grammarly’s AI-powered writing assistant
Zotero
Subtitle: Zotero is a free, easy-to-use tool to help you collect, organize, cite, and share research
Publisher: https://www.zotero.org/
Zotero
Website:
https://www.zotero.org/
About: Zotero is a great, easy to use reference management tool, and its free
Grammarly
Subtitle: Compose bold, clear, mistake-free writing with Grammarly’s AI-powered writing assistant
Publisher: https://www.grammarly.com/
Requirements and Policies
Academic Dishonesty Policy
As a Christian liberal arts university committed to the pursuit of truth and understanding, any act of academic dishonesty is especially distressing and cannot
be tolerated. In general, academic dishonesty involves the abuse and misuse of information or people to gain an undeserved academic advantage or evaluation.
The common forms of academic dishonesty include:
1. cheating – using deception in the taking of tests or the preparation of written work, using unauthorized materials, copying another person’s work with or without consent, or assisting another in such activities;
2. lying – falsifying, fabricating, or forging information in either written or spoken presentations;
3. plagiarism –
using the published writings, data, interpretations, or ideas of another without proper documentation.
Episodes of academic dishonesty are reported as appropriate to the Vice President for Academic Affairs. The potential penalty for academic dishonesty includes 1) a failing grade on a particular assignment, 2) a failing grade for the entire course, 3) suspension or expulsion, or (4) revocation of a degree.
Attendance Policy
Course enrollment and participation will be monitored and verified for all students during the first two weeks of classes. Lack of participation during this time may jeopardize enrollment status. Each student is expected to meet course expectations by completing the coursework required each week. Active participation and staying abreast of the material is essential to success. Program specific attendance policies may still apply.
E xecutive Residency Attendance Policy
Attendance to each Executive Residency class session is mandatory. Students may make-up no more than one (1) residency session throughout the duration of their academic program. Missing a second residency will result in the student being dismissed from the University.
Each student must be in attendance for the entire duration of the required residency weekend. Late arrivals and/or early departures are not permitted. Punctuality is important as each student is required to have the documented in-seat time per course requirements.
A missed session will result in the student attending a make-up session, and paying a
$300 Residency Make-Up fee. In addition, the student may be asked for documentation
from the program department providing an explanation as to why the schedule residency session was missed. Make-Up sessions must be completed prior to the end of the term. Noncompliance with this policy will result in dismissal from the executive program.
Study after study has linked successful academic performance with good class participation. Those who assume positions of responsibility must “show up” in order to be effective. Therefore, students are expected to actively participate in intelligent discussion of assigned topics in all areas (Discussion Board Activities, Synchronous Sessions, Forums, Shared Papers, etc.) to help process course material and/or to demonstrate understanding of course content. Point adjustments will be taken for non- participation.
D isability Accommodations
University of the Cumberlands accepts students with certified disabilities and provides reasonable accommodations for their certified needs in the classroom, in housing, in food service or in other areas. For accommodations to be awarded, a student must submit a completed Accommodations Application form and provide documentation of the disability to the Disability Services Coordinator (Mr. Jacob Ratliff, Boswell Campus Center, Student Services Office Suite, jacob.ratliff@ucumberlands.edu
). When all paperwork is on file, a meeting between the student and the Coordinator will be arranged to discuss possible accommodations before accommodations are formally approved. Students must then meet with the Coordinator at the beginning of each semester before any academic accommodations can be certified for that term.
Certifications for other accommodations are normally reviewed annually.
Course Evaluations
The course evaluation will be open during the last two weeks of the term. To access the evaluation (during that time), visit
https://uofcumberlands.campuslabs.com/eval-home/
and log-in using your UC credentials. A reminder email notification will be sent when the evaluation is available.
We value your feedback. Every evaluation is confidential and anonymous. The anonymous results of the course evaluations are not available for faculty to see until after final grades are submitted. Your thoughtful responses guide future improvements for the course and programs.
Academic Appeal
Both undergraduate and graduate students have the right to challenge a grade. If discussions with the course instructor and department chair do not lead to a satisfactory conclusion, students may file a formal written appeal with the Vice President for Academic Affairs, who will forward the appeal to the chair of the Academic Appeals Committee. This formal written appeal must be filed by the end of the 4th week of classes in the next regular term following the term in which the course in question was taken. The Academic Appeals Committee then gathers information from the student, the instructor, and any other relevant parties. The Committee will deliver its recommendation on the complaint to the Vice President for Academic Affairs. After reviewing this recommendation and concurring or amending it, the Vice President for Academic Affairs will inform the student and instructor of the disposition of the complaint no later than the last day of classes of the term in which the complaint was filed. Records of all actions regarding academic grade appeals, including their final disposition, are maintained by the Vice President for Academic Affairs and the Academic Appeals Committee. (
Undergraduate Catalog/Graduate Catalog
)
Student Responsibilities
Students should:
Use University of the Cumberlands email system for all academic, administrative, and co-curricular communication between faculty, staff and peers.
Check for email and class announcements using iLearn (primary) and University of the Cumberlands webmail (secondary) daily.
Demonstrate Cumberlands Character in and outside the classroom per the University Mission & Vision
Ensure you have consistent required technology for the course Participate in courses regularly to:
Find announcements and updates
Complete assignments on time. Keep in mind that all deadlines use Eastern Standard Time (EST).
Engage in discussion
Connect with fellow students and faculty
Present written work in an academic and professional manner.
Take examinations on the designated dates and times. Students should make arrangements with faculty before the designated date for any needed accommodations.
Contact faculty or student success coordinator with questions or concerns.
Course Policies
Students are expected to:
Review any assigned reading material and prepare responses to homework assigned.
Actively participate in activities, assignments, and discussions.
Evaluate and react to each other’s work in a supportive, constructive manner.
Complete specific assignments and exams when specified and in a professional manner.
Utilize learned technologies for class assignments.
Connect content knowledge from core courses to practical training placement and activities.
Course Evaluation
A student will be evaluated/weighted on the following basis:
Reflective Activity & Weekly Discussions (Weeks 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,13) 27.5
\% (25 points each)
Residency (Paper & Presentation) 50\% (500 points) Practical Connection Activity (Residency) 10\% (100 points) Research Papers 75 points each - 7.5\% (150 points)
Final Research Paper 5\% (50 points)
Total: 100\% (1,000 points)
Grading Scale
Graded work will receive a numeric score reflecting the quality of performance as given above in evaluation methods. The overall course grade will be determined according to the following scale:
A= 90 – 100 (90\% - 100\%)
B= 80 – 89 (80\% - 89\%)
C = 70 – 79 (70\% - 79\%)
F < 69 (Below 69\%)
Course Schedule
Course Weekly Schedule
Reading/Topics
Assignments and Due
Dates
16 Weeks
Week
Date
Topic/Required Readings
1
5-3-
2021
Introduction to Information Governance and Data Governance
Textbook: Chapter 2 – Information Governance, IT Governance, Data Gover Information Governance Principles
Readings:
ARMA International,
The Principles
, ARMA International Retrieved from:
https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.arma.org/resource/resmgr/files/Learn/2017_Gen
Saffady, William,PhD., F.A.I. (2015). Records management or information gov 41,47. Retrieved from
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1696246911?acc
Shevde, Nishad, (2018). Measuring Information Governance Success. Retriev management/measuring-information-governance-success/
2
5-10-
2021
Best Practices for Information Governance
Textbook: Chapter 4 – Information Risk Planning and Management and Cha Information Governance
Readings:
Tallon, Paul, (2016). Corporate Governance of Big Data: Perspectives on Valu
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/6519236
3
5-17-
2021
Internal and External Drivers/Legal Drivers for Information Governa
Textbook: Chapter 6: Information Governance Policy Development And App Records Management and Chapter 8 - Information Governance and Legal Fun
Readings:
Vogel, H. S., & Rood, D. K. .(2019). Dealing with subpoena requests for digita Retrieved from http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=17 d1adf1d7c39c\%40sessionmgr4008
4
5-24-
2021
Textbook: Chapter 7 – IG for Business Units
Textbook: Chapter 10 – Information Governance and Information Technolog
Readings:
Calderaro, A., & Craig, A. J. S. (2020). Transnational governance of cybersecu cyber capacity building. Third World Quarterly, 41(6), 917–938.
https://doi.or
Setyadi, R. (2019). Assessing Trust Variable Impact on the Information Techn Models: A Model Development Study. 2019 International Conference on Sust (ICSECC), Sustainable Engineering and Creative Computing (ICSECC), 2019 I
https://doi.org/10.1109/ICSECC.2019.8907224
5
5-31-
2021
Textbook: Chapter 8- Information Governance and Legal Functions
Readings:
Griffin, J. G. H. (2014). The future of technological law: The machine state. In Technology, 28(3), 299–315.
https://doi.org/10.1080/13600869.2014.932520
Vogel, H. S., & Rood, D. K. .(2019). Dealing with subpoena requests for digita Retrieved from http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=17 d1adf1d7c39c\%40sessionmgr4008
Zarsky, T. Z. (2014). Social Justice, Social Norms and the Governance of Soci
6
6-7-
2021
Textbook: Chapter 9 – Information Governance and Records and Information
Readings:
Md Ajis, A. F., & Hajar Baharin, S. (2019). Dark Data Management as frontier Symposium on Computer Applications & Industrial Electronics (ISCAIE), Com (ISCAIE), 2019 IEEE 9th Symposium On, 34–37.
https://doi.org/10.1109/ISCAI
Tallon, P. P., Ramirez, R. V., & Short, J. E. (2013). The Information Artifact in IT Governance. Journal of Management Information Systems, 30(3), 141–178.
h
Residency Weekend June 11-13, 2021
Friday – EASTERN TIME 5pm – 10pm Class
Saturday – EASTERN TIME 8:00am – 7:30pm Class
1.5 hour lunch break (scheduled time at faculty discretion)
Sunday– EASTERN TIME 8am – 1pm Class
7
6-14-
2021
Reading Assignments
Textbook: Chapter 11 – Information Governance and Privacy and Security F
Borgman, C. L. (2018). Open Data, Grey Data, and Stewardship: Universities Journal, 33(2), 365–412. Retrieved from: http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfv 4af5-9c62-d1adf1d7c39c\%40sessionmgr4008
Qin, H., Li, Z., & Yang, J. (2020). The Impact of Online Media Big Data on Firm Method. Mathematical Problems in Engineering, 1–7.
https://doi.org/10.1155
/
Savić, D. (2019). When is ‘grey’ too ‘grey’? A case of grey data. Grey Journal
8
6-21-
2021
Information Governance for Email and Social Media
Textbook: Chapter 12 - Information Governance for E-Mail and Instant Mess for Social Media
Readings:
TOWER, 2004. E-Mail Management: Avoiding the 6 Common Mistakes. Best P
Compliance. Pages 6 – 8. Retrieved from http://www.marms.org/wp-content/
u
REGULATORY-COMPLY.PDF There are many articles in the source that should other electronic communication media.
Jackson, O. (2018). GDPR: companies at risk over unstructured data. Internat
http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/eds/detail/detail?vid=31&sid=73312ccd-f875-4a d1adf1d7c39c\%40sessionmgr4008&bdata=JkF1dGhUeXBlPXNoaWImc2l0ZT
9
6-28-
2021
Reading Assignments
Textbook: Chapter 13 – Information Governance for Social Media
Ahmed, J., Yildirim, S., Nowostaki, M., Ramachandra, R., Elezaj, O., & Abomoh Data Protection in Online Social Networks: A Blockchain-Based Approach. 20 and Computer Technologies (ICICT), Information and Computer Technologies ICICT, 307–312.
https://doi.org/10.1109/ICICT50521.2020.00054
Elsayed, M., Abdelwahab, A., & Ahdelkader, H. (2019). A Proposed Framewor in Social Media. 2019 14th International Conference on Computer Engineerin and Systems (ICCES), 2019 14th International Conference On, 61–65.
https:/
Jackson, O. (2018). GDPR: companies at risk over unstructured data. Internat
http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/eds/detail/detail?vid=31&sid=73312ccd-f875-4a d1adf1d7c39c\%40sessionmgr4008&bdata=JkF1dGhUeXBlPXNoaWImc2l0ZT
10
7-5-
2021
Information Governance for Mobile Computing
Textbook: Chapter 14: Information Governance for Mobile Devices
Readings
Limantara, N., Kosala, R., Ranti, B., & Supangkat, S. H. (2019). Human and Te Mobile Devices in Learning Activities. 2019 International Conference on ICT f (ICISS), 2019 International Conference On, 7, 1–5. https://doi.org/10.1109/ICI
Rothstein, M. A., Wilbanks, J. T., Beskow, L. M., Brelsford, K. M., Brothers, K. B McGowan, M. L., & Tovino, S. A. (2020). Unregulated Health Research Using M Recommendations. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 48, 196–226.
https://d
Shankar, A., & Kumari, P. (2019). A Study of Factors Affecting Mobile Governa Extension of the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM). South Asian Journal of
11
7-12-
2021
Information Governance for Cloud Computing
Textbook: Chapter 15 – Information Governance for Cloud Computing
Readings:
A Comparative Study of Data Deduplication Strategies. (2018). 2018 First Int Computing and Communication (ICSCCC), Secure Cyber Computing and Com Conference On, 68. Retrieved from
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/870
Patricia C. Franks. (2015). New Technologies, New Challenges: Records Reten 39(2), 191–209. Retrieved from http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfviewer/pd
d1adf1d7c39c\%40sessionmgr4008
12
7-19-
2021
Emerging Topics in Information Governance
Textbook: Chapter 16 – Leveraging and Governing Emerging Technologies
Readings:
A. F. Md Ajis and S. Hajar Baharin, Dark Data Management as frontier of Info on Computer Applications & Industrial Electronics (ISCAIE), Malaysia, 2019, p
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8743915?arnumber=8743915
Shetty, Sony (2017). How to Tackle Dark Data”. Retrieved from https://www
.g
dark-data/
13
7-26-
2021
Records Preservation
Textbook: Chapter 17 – Long-Term Digital Preservation
Readings:
Park, S. H., Zhang, Y., & Keister, L. A. (2020). Governance Innovations in Eme Perspectives, 34(2), 226–239.
https://doi.org/10.5465/amp.2017.0177
P. C. Franks, Government use of cloud-based long term digital preservation Heritage, Granada, 2015, pp. 371-374, https://doi.org/10.1109/DigitalHeritag
Pike, E. R. (2020). Defending Data: Toward Ethical Protections and Comprehe 69(4), 687–743.
Zwarich, N., & Park, E. G. (2017). Toward E-Mail Governance: Policies and Pra Journal of Information & Library Sciences, 41(3), 169–185
14
8-2-
2021
Reading Assignments
Textbook: Chapter 18 – Maintaining an Information Governance Program an
Knud Brandis, Srdan Dzombeta, Ricardo Colomo-Palacios, & Vladimir Stantch Cloud Scenarios. Applied Sciences, 9(2), 320.
https://doi.org/10.3390/app90
2
Sam Lubbe, & Osden Jokonya. (2011). Using information technology governa creator of business values – a case study. South African Journal of Economic
https://doi.org/10.4102/sajems.v12i1.264
15
8-9-
2021
Reading Assignments
Arshad, A., Bin Noordin, M. F., Bint Othman, R., & Mehmood, W. (2018). Desig Systems – Development of an Integrated Component-Based KM Model for Eff Conference on Information and Communication Technology for the Muslim W Technology for the Muslim World (ICT4M), 2018 International Conference on,
https://doi.org/10.1109/ICT4M.2018.00065
Jimenez, J. I., & Jahankhani, H. (2019). “Privacy by Design” Governance Fram Health Information (PHI) Processed by IoT-based Telemedicine Devices and A 12th International Conference on Global Security, Safety and Sustainability ( (ICGS3), 2019 IEEE 12th International Conference On, 212.
https://doi.org/10
Tse, D., Chow, C., Ly, T., Tong, C., & Tam, K. (2018). The Challenges of Big Da International Conference On Trust, Security And Privacy In Computing And C Conference On Big Data Science And Engineering (TrustCom/BigDataSE), Tru Communications/ 12th IEEE International Conference On Big Data Science A IEEE International Conference On, TRUSTCOM-BIGDATASE, 1632–1636.
https://doi.org/10.1109/TrustCom/BigDataSE.2018.00240
16
8-16-
Short Week
2021
Review the Research Videos Online
Last Day of Class is Thursday, August 19, 2021
Syllabus Disclaimer
This syllabus contains important information critical to your success in this course. It includes guidelines for this course and the instructor’s current expectations about content, schedule, and requirements necessary for each student to achieve the best educational results. While you must review and become familiar with the contents of
this syllabus, the instructor reserves the right to make adjustments or change in the syllabus from time to time. Any changes to the syllabus will be discussed with the students.
INFORMATION
GOVERNANCE
Founded in 1807, John Wiley & Sons is the oldest independent publishing company in
the United States. With offi ces in North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia, Wiley
is globally committed to developing and marketing print and electronic products and
services for our customers’ professional and personal knowledge and understanding.
The Wiley CIO series provides information, tools, and insights to IT executives
and managers. The products in this series cover a wide range of topics that supply
strategic and implementation guidance on the latest technology trends, leadership, and
emerging best practices.
Titles in the Wiley CIO series include:
The Agile Architecture Revolution: How Cloud Computing, REST-Based SOA, and
Mobile Computing Are Changing Enterprise IT by Jason BloombergT
Big Data, Big Analytics: Emerging Business Intelligence and Analytic Trends for Today’s
Businesses by Michael Minelli, Michele Chambers, and Ambiga Dhiraj
The Chief Information Offi cer’s Body of Knowledge: People, Process, and Technology by
Dean Lane
CIO Best Practices: Enabling Strategic Value with Information Technology (Second
Edition) by Joe Stenzel, Randy Betancourt, Gary Cokins, Alyssa Farrell, Bill
Flemming, Michael H. Hugos, Jonathan Hujsak, and Karl Schubert
The CIO Playbook: Strategies and Best Practices for IT Leaders to Deliver Value by
Nicholas R. Colisto
Enterprise Performance Management Done Right: An Operating System for Your
Organization by Ron Dimon
Executive’s Guide to Virtual Worlds: How Avatars Are Transforming Your Business and
Your Brand by Lonnie Bensond
IT Leadership Manual: Roadmap to Becoming a Trusted Business Partner by Alan R. r
Guibord
Managing Electronic Records: Methods, Best Practices, and Technologies by Robert F. s
Smallwood
On Top of the Cloud: How CIOs Leverage New Technologies to Drive Change and Build
Value Across the Enterprise by Hunter Muller
Straight to the Top: CIO Leadership in a Mobile, Social, and Cloud-based World (Second
Edition) by Gregory S. Smith
Strategic IT: Best Practices for Managers and Executives by Arthur M. Langer ands
Lyle Yorks
Transforming IT Culture: How to Use Social Intelligence, Human Factors, and
Collaboration to Create an IT Department That Outperforms by Frank Wanders
Unleashing the Power of IT: Bringing People, Business, and Technology Together by Dan
Roberts
The U.S. Technology Skills Gap: What Every Technology Executive Must Know to Save
America’s Future by Gary J. Beach
Information Governance: Concepts, Strategies and Best Practices by Robert F. Smallwoods
Robert F. Smallwood
INFORMATION
GOVERNANCE
CONCEPTS, STRATEGIES AND
BEST PRACTICES
Cover image: © iStockphoto / IgorZh
Cover design: Wiley
Copyright © 2014 by Robert F. Smallwood. All rights reserved.
Chapter 7 © 2014 by Barclay Blair
Portions of Chapter 8 © 2014 by Randolph Kahn
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Smallwood, Robert F., 1959-
Information governance : concepts, strategies, and best practices / Robert F. Smallwood.
pages cm. — (Wiley CIO series)
ISBN 978-1-118-21830-3 (cloth); ISBN 978-1-118-41949-6 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-42101-7 (ebk)
1. Information technology—Management. 2. Management information systems. 3. Electronic
records—Management. I. Title.
HD30.2.S617 2014
658.4’038—dc23
2013045072
Printed in the United States of America
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For my sons
and the next generation of tech-savvy managers
vii
CONTENTS
PREFACE xv
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xvii
PA RT O N E — Information Governance Concepts,
Defi nitions, and Principles 1p
C H A P T E R 1 The Onslaught of Big Data and the Information Governance
Imperative 3
Defi ning Information Governance 5
IG Is Not a Project, But an Ongoing Program 7
Why IG Is Good Business 7
Failures in Information Governance 8
Form IG Policies, Then Apply Technology for Enforcement 10
Notes 12
C H A P T E R 2 Information Governance, IT Governance, Data
Governance: What’s the Difference? 15
Data Governance 15
IT Governance 17
Information Governance 20
Impact of a Successful IG Program 20
Summing Up the Differences 21
Notes 22
C H A P T E R 3 Information Governance Principles 25
Accountability Is Key 27
Generally Accepted Recordkeeping Principles® 27
Contributed by Charmaine Brooks, CRM
Assessment and Improvement Roadmap 34
Who Should Determine IG Policies? 35
Notes 38
PA RT T W O — Information Governance Risk Assessment
and Strategic Planning 41g g
C H A P T E R 4 Information Risk Planning and Management 43
Step 1: Survey and Determine Legal and Regulatory Applicability
and Requirements 43
viii CONTENTS
Step 2: Specify IG Requirements to Achieve Compliance 46
Step 3: Create a Risk Profi le 46
Step 4: Perform Risk Analysis and Assessment 48
Step 5: Develop an Information Risk Mitigation Plan 49
Step 6: Develop Metrics and Measure Results 50
Step 7: Execute Your Risk Mitigation Plan 50
Step 8: Audit the Information Risk Mitigation Program 51
Notes 51
C H A P T E R 5 Strategic Planning and Best Practices for
Information Governance 53
Crucial Executive Sponsor Role 54
Evolving Role of the Executive Sponsor 55
Building Your IG Team 56
Assigning IG Team Roles and Responsibilities 56
Align Your IG Plan with Organizational Strategic Plans 57
Survey and Evaluate External Factors 58
Formulating the IG Strategic Plan 65
Notes 69
C H A P T E R 6 Information Governance Policy Development 71
A Brief Review of Generally Accepted Recordkeeping Principles® 71
IG Reference Model 72
Best Practices Considerations 75
Standards Considerations 76
Benefi ts and Risks of Standards 76
Key Standards Relevant to IG Efforts 77
Major National and Regional ERM Standards 81
Making Your Best Practices and Standards Selections to Inform
Your IG Framework 87
Roles and Responsibilities 88
Program Communications and Training 89
Program Controls, Monitoring, Auditing and Enforcement 89
Notes 91
PA RT T H R E E — Information Governance Key
Impact Areas Based on the IG Reference Model 95p
C H A P T E R 7 Business Considerations for a Successful IG Program 97
By Barclay T. Blair
Changing Information Environment 97
CONTENTS ix
Calculating Information Costs 99
Big Data Opportunities and Challenges 100
Full Cost Accounting for Information 101
Calculating the Cost of Owning Unstructured Information 102
The Path to Information Value 105
Challenging the Culture 107
New Information Models 107
Future State: What Will the IG-Enabled Organization Look Like? 110
Moving Forward 111
Notes 113
C H A P T E R 8 Information Governance and Legal Functions 115
By Robert Smallwood with Randy Kahn, Esq., and Barry Murphy
Introduction to e-Discovery: The Revised 2006 Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure Changed Everything 115
Big Data Impact 117
More Details on the Revised FRCP Rules 117
Landmark E-Discovery Case: Zubulake v. UBS Warburg 119
E-Discovery Techniques 119
E-Discovery Reference Model 119
The Intersection of IG and E-Discovery 122
By Barry Murphy
Building on Legal Hold Programs to Launch Defensible Disposition 125
By Barry Murphy
Destructive Retention of E-Mail 126
Newer Technologies That Can Assist in E-Discovery 126
Defensible Disposal: The Only Real Way To Manage Terabytes and Petabytes 130
By Randy Kahn, Esq.
Retention Policies and Schedules 137
By Robert Smallwood, edited by Paula Lederman, MLS
Notes 144
C H A P T E R 9 Information Governance and Records and
Information Management Functions 147
Records Management Business Rationale 149
Why Is Records Management So Challenging? 150
Benefi ts of Electronic Records Management 152
Additional Intangible Benefi ts 153
Inventorying E-Records 154
Generally Accepted Recordkeeping Principles® 155
E-Records Inventory Challenges 155
x CONTENTS
Records Inventory Purposes 156
Records Inventorying Steps 157
Ensuring Adoption and Compliance of RM Policy 168
General Principles of a Retention Scheduling 169
Developing a Records Retention Schedule 170
Why Are Retention Schedules Needed? 171
What Records Do You Have to Schedule? Inventory and Classifi cation 173
Rationale for Records Groupings 174
Records Series Identifi cation and Classifi cation 174
Retention of E-Mail Records 175
How Long Should You Keep Old E-Mails? 176
Destructive Retention of E-Mail 177
Legal Requirements and Compliance Research 178
Event-Based Retention Scheduling for Disposition of E-Records 179
Prerequisites for Event-Based Disposition 180
Final Disposition and Closure Criteria 181
Retaining Transitory Records 182
Implementation of the Retention Schedule and Disposal of Records 182
Ongoing Maintenance of the Retention Schedule 183
Audit to Manage Compliance with the Retention Schedule 183
Notes 186
C H A P T E R 10 Information Governance and Information
Technology Functions 189
Data Governance 191
Steps to Governing Data Effectively 192
Data Governance Framework 193
Information Management 194
IT Governance 196
IG Best Practices for Database Security and Compliance 202
Tying It All Together 204
Notes 205
C H A P T E R 11 Information Governance and Privacy and
Security Functions 207
Cyberattacks Proliferate 207
Insider Threat: Malicious or Not 208
Privacy Laws 210
Defense in Depth 212
Controlling Access Using Identity Access Management 212
Enforcing IG: Protect Files with Rules and Permissions 213
CONTENTS xi
Challenge of Securing Confi dential E-Documents 213
Apply Better Technology for Better Enforcement in the Extended Enterprise 215
E-Mail Encryption 217
Secure Communications Using Record-Free E-Mail 217
Digital Signatures 218
Document Encryption 219
Data Loss Prevention (DLP) Technology 220
Missing Piece: Information Rights Management (IRM) 222
Embedded Protection 226
Hybrid Approach: Combining DLP and IRM Technologies 227
Securing Trade Secrets after Layoffs and Terminations 228
Persistently Protecting Blueprints and CAD Documents 228
Securing Internal Price Lists 229
Approaches for Securing Data Once It Leaves the Organization 230
Document Labeling 231
Document Analytics 232
Confi dential Stream Messaging 233
Notes 236
PA RT F O U R — Information Governance for
Delivery Platforms 239y
C H A P T E R 12 Information Governance for E-Mail and Instant Messaging 241
Employees Regularly Expose Organizations to E-Mail Risk 242
E-Mail Polices Should Be Realistic and Technology Agnostic 243
E-Record Retention: Fundamentally a Legal Issue 243
Preserve E-Mail Integrity and Admissibility with Automatic Archiving 244
Instant Messaging 247
Best Practices for Business IM Use 247
Technology to Monitor IM 249
Tips for Safer IM 249
Notes 251
C H A P T E R 13 Information Governance for Social Media 253
By Patricia Franks, Ph.D, CRM, and Robert Smallwood
Types of Social Media in Web 2.0 253
Additional Social Media Categories 255
Social Media in the Enterprise 256
Key Ways Social Media Is Different from E-Mail and Instant Messaging 257
Biggest Risks of Social Media 257
Legal Risks of Social Media Posts 259
xii CONTENTS
Tools to Archive Social Media 261
IG Considerations for Social Media 262
Key Social Media Policy Guidelines 263
Records Management and Litigation Considerations for Social Media 264
Emerging Best Practices for Managing Social Media Records 267
Notes 269
C H A P T E R 14 Information Governance for Mobile Devices 271
Current Trends in Mobile Computing 273
Security Risks of Mobile Computing 274
Securing Mobile Data 274
Mobile Device Management 275
IG for Mobile Computing 276
Building Security into Mobile Applications 277
Best Practices to Secure Mobile Applications 280
Developing Mobile Device Policies 281
Notes 283
C H A P T E R 15 Information Governance for Cloud Computing 285
By Monica Crocker CRM, PMP, CIP, and Robert Smallwood
Defi ning Cloud Computing 286
Key Characteristics of Cloud Computing 287
What Cloud Computing Really Means 288
Cloud Deployment Models 289
Security Threats with Cloud Computing 290
Benefi ts of the Cloud 298
Managing Documents and Records in the Cloud 299
IG Guidelines for Cloud Computing Solutions 300
Notes 301
C H A P T E R 16 SharePoint Information Governance 303
By Monica Crocker, CRM, PMP, CIP, edited by Robert Smallwood
Process Change, People Change 304
Where to Begin the Planning Process 306
Policy Considerations 310
Roles and Responsibilities 311
Establish Processes 312
Training Plan 313
Communication Plan 313
Note 314
CONTENTS xiii
PA RT F I V E — Long-Term Program Issues 315g g
C H A P T E R 17 Long-Term Digital Preservation 317
By Charles M. Dollar and Lori J. Ashley
Defi ning Long-Term Digital Preservation 317
Key Factors in Long-Term Digital Preservation 318
Threats to Preserving Records 320
Digital Preservation Standards 321
PREMIS Preservation Metadata Standard 328
Recommended Open Standard Technology-Neutral Formats 329
Digital Preservation Requirements 333
Long-Term Digital Preservation Capability Maturity Model® 334
Scope of the Capability Maturity Model 336
Digital Preservation Capability Performance Metrics 341
Digital Preservation Strategies and Techniques 341
Evolving Marketplace 344
Looking Forward 344
Notes 346
C H A P T E R 18 Maintaining an Information Governance Program
and Culture of Compliance 349
Monitoring and Accountability 349
Staffi ng Continuity Plan 350
Continuous Process Improvement 351
Why Continuous Improvement Is Needed 351
Notes 353
A P P E N D I X A Information Organization and Classifi cation:
Taxonomies and Metadata 355
By Barb Blackburn, CRM, with Robert Smallwood; edited by Seth Earley
Importance of Navigation and Classifi cation 357
When Is a New Taxonomy Needed? 358
Taxonomies Improve Search Results 358
Metadata and Taxonomy 359
Metadata Governance, Standards, and Strategies 360
Types of Metadata 362
Core Metadata Issues 363
International Metadata Standards and Guidance 364
Records Grouping Rationale 368
Business Classifi cation Scheme, File Plans, and Taxonomy 368
Classifi cation and Taxonomy 369
xiv CONTENTS
Prebuilt versus Custom Taxonomies 370
Thesaurus Use in Taxonomies 371
Taxonomy Types 371
Business Process Analysis 377
Taxonomy Testing: A Necessary Step 379
Taxonomy Maintenance 380
Social Tagging and Folksonomies 381
Notes 383
A P P E N D I X B Laws and Major Regulations Related to
Records Management 385
United States 385
Canada 387
By Ken Chasse, J.D., LL.M.
United Kingdom 389
Australia 391
Notes 394
A P P E N D I X C Laws and Major Regulations
Related to Privacy 397
United States 397
Major Privacy Laws Worldwide, by Country 398
Notes 400
GLOSSARY 401
ABOUT THE AUTHOR 417
ABOUT THE MAJOR CONTRIBUTORS 419
INDEX 421
xv
PREFACE
I
nformation governance (IG) has emerged as a key concern for business executives
and managers in today’s environment of Big Data, increasing information risks, co-
lossal leaks, and greater compliance and legal demands. But few seem to have a clear
understanding of what IG is; that is, how you defi ne what it is and is not, and how to
implement it. This book clarifi es and codifi es these defi nitions and provides key in-
sights as to how to implement and gain value from IG programs. Based on exhaustive
research, and with the contributions of a number of industry pioneers and experts, this
book lays out IG as a complete discipline in and of itself for the fi rst time.
IG is a super-discipline that includes components of several key fi elds: law, records
management, information technology (IT), risk management, privacy and security,
and business operations. This unique blend calls for a new breed of information pro-
fessional who is competent across these established and quite complex fi elds. Training
and education are key to IG success, and this book provides the essential underpinning
for organizations to train a new generation of IG professionals.
Those who are practicing professionals in the component fi elds of IG will fi nd
the book useful in expanding their knowledge from traditional fi elds to the emerging
tenets of IG. Attorneys, records and compliance managers, risk managers, IT manag-
ers, and security and privacy professionals will fi nd this book a particularly valuable
resource.
The book strives to offer clear IG concepts, actionable strategies, and proven best
practices in an understandable and digestible way; a concerted effort was made to
simplify language and to offer examples. There are summaries of key points through-
out and at the end of each chapter to help the reader retain major points. The text
is organized into fi ve parts: (1) Information Governance Concepts, Defi nitions, and
Principles; (2) IG Risk Assessment and Strategic Planning; (3) IG Key Impact Areas;
(4) IG for Delivery Platforms; and (5) Long-Term Program Issues. Also included are
appendices with detailed information on taxonomy and metadata design and on re-
cords management and privacy legislation.
One thing that is sure is that the complex fi eld of IG is evolving. It will continue
to change and solidify. But help is here: No other book offers the kind of compre-
hensive coverage of IG contained within these pages. Leveraging the critical advice
provided here will smooth your path to understanding and implementing successful
IG programs.
Robert F. Smallwood
xvii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I
would like to sincerely thank my colleagues for their support and generous contribu-
tion of their expertise and time, which made this pioneering text possible.
Many thanks to Lori Ashley, Barb Blackburn, Barclay Blair, Charmaine Brooks,
Ken Chasse, Monica Crocker, Charles M. Dollar, Seth Earley, Dr. Patricia Franks,
Randy Kahn, Paula Lederman, and Barry Murphy.
I am truly honored to include their work and owe them a great debt of gratitude.
PA RT O N E
Information
Governance
Concepts,
Defi nitions, and
Principles
3
The Onslaught
of Big Data and
the Information
Governance Imperative
C H A P T E R 1
T
he value of information in business is rising, and business leaders are more and
more viewing the ability to govern, manage, and harvest information as critical
to success. Raw data is now being increasingly viewed as an asset that can be
leveraged, just like fi nancial or human capital.1 Some have called this new age of “Big
Data” the “industrial revolution of data.”
According to the research group Gartner, Inc., Big Data is defi ned as “high-volume,
high-velocity and high-variety information assets that demand cost-effective, inno-
vative forms of information processing for enhanced insight and decision making.” 2
A practical defi nition should also include the idea that the amount of data—both struc-
tured (in databases) and unstructured (e.g., e-mail, scanned documents) is so mas-
sive that it cannot be processed using today’s database tools and analytic software
techniques. 3
In today’s information overload era of Big Data—characterized by massive growth
in business data volumes and velocity—the ability to distill key insights from enor-
mous amounts of data is a major business differentiator and source of sustainable com-
petitive advantage. In fact, a recent report by the World Economic Forum stated that
data is a new asset class and personal data is “the new oil.” 4 And we are generating more
than we can manage effectively with current methods and tools.
The Big Data numbers are overwhelming: Estimates and projections vary, but it
has been stated that 90 percent of the data existing worldwide today was created in the
last two years 5 and that every two days more information is generated than was from
the dawn of civilization until 2003. 6 This trend will continue: The global market for
Big Data technology and services is projected to grow at a compound annual rate of
27 percent through 2017, about six times faster than the general information and com-
munications technology (ICT) market. 7
Many more comparisons and statistics are available, and all demonstrate the
incredible and continued growth of data.
Certainly, there are new and emerging opportunities arising from the accu-
mulation and analysis of all that data we are busy generating and collecting. New
enterprises are springing up to capitalize on data mining and business intelligence
opportunities. The U.S. federal government joined in, announcing $200 million in
Big Data research programs in 2012.8
4 INFORMATION GOVERNANCE
Big Data values massive accumulation of data, whereas in business, e-discovery
realities and potential legal liabilities dictate that data be culled to only that
which has clear business value.
But established organizations, especially larger ones, are being crushed by this
onslaught of Big Data: It is just too expensive to keep all the information that is being
generated, and unneeded information is a sort of irrelevant sludge for decision makers
to wade through. They have diffi culty knowing which information is an accurate and
meaningful “wheat” and which is simply irrelevant “chaff.” This means they do not
have the precise information they need to base good business decisions upon.
And all that Big Data piling up has real costs: The burden of massive stores of
information has increased storage management costs dramatically, caused overloaded
systems to fail, and increased legal discovery costs. 9 Further, the longer that data is
kept, the more likely that it will need to be migrated to newer computing platforms,
driving up conversion costs; and legally, there is the risk that somewhere in that
mountain of data an organization stores is a piece of information that represents a
signifi cant legal liability.10
This is where the worlds of Big Data and business collide . For Big Data proponents,
more data is always better, and there is no perceived downside to accumulation of mas-
sive amounts of data. In the business world, though, the realities of legal e-discovery
mean the opposite is true. 11 To reduce risk, liability, and costs, it is critical for unneeded
information to be disposed of in a systematic, methodical, and “legally defensible” (jus-
tifi able in legal proceedings) way, when it no longer has legal, regulatory, or business
value. And there also is the high-value benefi t of basing decisions on better, cleaner
data, which can come about only through rigid, enforced information governance
(IG) policies that reduce information glut.
Organizations are struggling to reduce and right-size their information footprint
by discarding superfl uous and redundant data, e-documents, and information. But the
critical issue is devising policies, methods, and processes and then deploying information technol-
ogy (IT) to sort through which information is valuable and which no longer has business value
and can be discarded.
IT, IG, risk, compliance, and legal representatives in organizations have a clear
sense that most of the information stored is unneeded, raises costs, and poses risks.
According to a survey taken at a recent Compliance, Governance and Oversight
Counsel summit, respondents estimated that approximately 25 percent of information
stored in organizations has real business value, while 5 percent must be kept as busi-
ness records and about 1 percent is retained due to a litigation hold. “This means that
The onslaught of Big Data necessitates that information governance (IG) be
implemented to discard unneeded data in a legally defensible way.
THE ONSLAUGHT OF BIG DATA AND THE INFORMATION GOVERNANCE IMPERATIVE 5
[about] 69 percent of information in most companies has no business, legal, or regulatory value.
Companies that are able to dispose of this data debris return more profi t to sharehold-
ers, can leverage more of their IT budgets for strategic investments, and can avoid
excess expense in legal and regulatory response” (emphasis added). 12
With a smaller information footprint , organizations can more easily fi nd what they tt
need and derive business value from it.13 They must eliminate the data debris regularly
and consistently, and to do this, processes and systems must be in place to cull valuable
information and discard the data debris daily. An IG program sets the framework to
accomplish this.
The business environment has also underscored the need for IG. According to
Ted Friedman at Gartner, “The recent global fi nancial crisis has put information gov-
ernance in the spotlight. . . . [It] is a priority of IT and business leaders as a result of
various pressures, including regulatory compliance mandates and the urgent need for
improved decision-making.” 14
And IG mastery is critical for executives: Gartner predicts that by 2016, one in fi ve chief
information offi cers in regulated industries will be fi red from their jobs for failed IG initiatives. s 15
Defi ning Information Governance
IG is a sort of super discipline that has emerged as a result of new and tightened legislation
governing businesses, external threats such as hacking and data breaches, and the recog-
nition that multiple overlapping disciplines were needed to address today’s information
management challenges in an increasingly regulated and litigated business environment.16
IG is a subset of corporate governance, and includes key concepts from re-
cords management, content management, IT and data governance, information se-
curity, data privacy, risk management, litigation readiness, regulatory compliance,
long-term digital preservation , and even business intelligence. This also means
that it includes related technology and discipline subcategories, such as document
management, enterprise search, knowledge management, and business continuity/
disaster recovery.
Only about one quarter of information organizations are managing has real
business value.
With a smaller information footprint, it is easier for organizations to fi nd the
information they need and derive business value from it.
IG is a subset of corporate governance.
6 INFORMATION GOVERNANCE
IG is a sort of superdiscipline that encompasses a variety of key concepts from
a variety of related disciplines.
Practicing good IG is the essential foundation for building legally defensible
disposition practices to discard unneeded information and to secure confi dential in-
formation, which may include trade secrets, strategic plans, price lists, blueprints, or
personally identifi able information (PII) subject to privacy laws; it provides the basis
for consistent, reliable methods for managing data, e-documents, and records.
Having trusted and reliable records, reports, data, and databases enables managers
to make key decisions with …
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od pressure and hypertension via a community-wide intervention that targets the problem across the lifespan (i.e. includes all ages).
Develop a community-wide intervention to reduce elevated blood pressure and hypertension in the State of Alabama that in
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w or quality improvement; it was just all part of good nursing care. The goal for quality improvement is to monitor patient outcomes using statistics for comparison to standards of care for different diseases
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Topic: Purchasing and Technology
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No matter which type of health care organization
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We can mention at least one example of how the violation of ethical standards can be prevented. Many organizations promote ethical self-regulation by creating moral codes to help direct their business activities
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With covid coming into place
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