Electronic Records
What are Electronic Records?
• Informational files or data created, received,
  maintained, and stored in digitized form through the
  use of computers and applications software.
• Always machine dependent formats.
• Accessible and readable only with the assistance of
  digital processors.
• Computer programs and software are not considered
  electronic records.
                         Storage
•   Optical discs (floppies, CDs, DVDs)
•   Magnetic tape
•   Hard drives
•   Servers
•   Grid computing
•   Cloud
                      Formats
• Electronic messages, including email, voicemail, and
  instant messaging.
• Word processing documents and spreadsheets
• Databases
• Webpages
• Digital images
• Video and audio files
     Management of Electronic Records
• University retention guidelines apply to all electronic
  records regardless of their digital form.
• Failure to properly maintain electronic records may
  expose the University to legal risks.
• Include a plan for migrating records when operating
  systems and/or software applications are changed or
  upgraded).
 Who Is responsible for Electronic Records
             Maintenance?
• University employees are responsible for maintaining
  the integrity of electronic records.
   – Includes administration, control, preservation,
     access and security of records within their
     custody.
• Compliance with Federal, State, and University policy
  and retention/disposal of electronic records is the
  responsibility of the Departments.
            Records are defined as…
• Contemporaneous evidence of a business
  transaction.
   – Must be accurate and complete capture and
     preservation of content, context and structure
     through time.
   – Authentic, reliable, and trustworthy
  Characteristics of Trustworthy Electronic
                   Records
• Reliability – trusted as a full and accurate
  representation of the transactions, activities, or facts
  to which it attests.
• Authenticity – proven to be what it purports to be
  and created or sent by the person who purports to
  have created and sent it.
• Integrity – has all the information necessary to
  ensure its usefulness.
• Accessibility – can be located, retrieved, presented,
  and interpreted.
               Records as Evidence
• Federal Rules of Evidence, Article VIII, Rule 803 (6)-
  Hearsay exceptions says that a record…
   – Should be dated to prove that it was made near
     the time of the event
   – Sent or transmitted by someone with knowledge
   – For legal admissibility, records creation must be
     undertaken in the regular conduct of business
   – Methods of record preparation must be
     trustworthy.
                What is Metadata?
• Evidence, typically stored electronically that
  describes the characteristics, origins, usage and
  validity of other electronic evidence.
• System or embedded metadata includes…
   – Author
   – Date
   – Time of creation
   – Date document was modified
       Challenges of Electronic Records
• Proliferation of electronic records
• Ease of duplication and dissemination raises
  concerns of authenticity.
• Greater risk for potential security breaches and virus
  attacks
• Lack of a “physical” presence can make it easy to lose
  track of records disposition.
• Perceived irrelevance of records managers and
  archivist
Challenges of Electronic Records cont.
• “Born-digital” materials are much more complicated
  and costly to preserve than anticipated
• Software applications can combine graphics, text,
  and sound into a single record
• Networked systems allow multiple authors to work
  on a single document.
• There are no permanent storage media.
            Impediments to Access
• Records depend on technology to interpret them.
   – Obsolescence (media & hardware)
   – Bit Rot: Deterioration thru compression,
     conversion, transmission
   – Storage and ability to retrieve information
   – Proprietary nature of software
   – Increasingly dynamic content
   – Lack of planning
     Organizing Your Electronic Records
An effective approach is to have a filing system that
mirrors your paper files (Hybrid Files).
• Create a series of electronic folder and subfolders
  records
   – Group like files together
• Arrange hierarchically from the general to the
  specific in a series of directories.
• Standardize file names.
           Challenges in File Naming
• Version Control - which is the “official record” and
  which are drafts
• Uniqueness
• Persistence over time
• Access and retrieval
• Determining what metadata to collect
• Scalability
                    File Naming
• Develop naming conventions that are:
   – Logical
   – Consistent
   – Allow sensible sorting
• Example: Board Minutes
   – Minutes 2005_07
   – Record series, year, month
   – Files sort in chronological sequence
               Standardize Terminology
The benefits of standardizing the terminology:
   –   Access files easily and rapidly
   –   Train new employees in less time
   –   Avoid the loss of information
   –   Name files quickly and easily
   –   Share files more easily
   –   Identifies the groups of files eligible for disposition at the
       same time
         Compressing Electronic Files
• Pros: Saves storage space easily transmited.
• Cons: May result in data loss. Introduces an
  additional layer of software dependency.
• Three types of loss depending on your course of
  action:
   – Data (image “lossy” or “lossless”)
   – Appearance (loss of structure, page layout)
   – Relationships (spreadsheet cell formulas, database
     file fields)
       Long Term Preservation of Files
• Most records are created using specific, proprietary
  software applications, but there is a risk.
   – Over time, these applications may not be able to
     read files created with previous version (backward
     compatibility)
• Non-proprietary formats are ideal for long-term
  preservation of files, but each has its limitations
   – ASCII or plain text will capture data in the lowest
     common denominator of formats – loses structure
     and functions in the process.
                Preservation cont.
• Magnetic tape can develop read-errors.
• Optical storage media can fail completely after only a
  few years, especially if they are not stored in the
  proper environment.
• Migrate data periodically to a new software version
  or system – labor intensive.