Difference between revisions of "Clinton Electronic Records Project"
(New page: '''The Clinton Electronic Records Project''' was established to preserve, protect, and organize all of the electronic records of the Clinton-Gore presidential administration. [[Sam Watkins...) |
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− | '''The Clinton Electronic Records Project''' was established to preserve, protect, and organize all of the electronic records of the Clinton-Gore presidential administration. [[Sam Watkins]] is director of the Clinton Electronic Records Project. | + | '''The Clinton Electronic Records Project''' was established to preserve, protect, and organize all of the electronic records of the Clinton-Gore presidential administration. [[Sam Watkins]] is director of the Clinton Electronic Records Project. |
− | In ''Alexander v. FBI'' the White House came under scrutiny for deleting or improperly disposing of one million emails received during the presidency of [[Bill Clinton]]. | + | [[Michelle Cobb]] of he [[Office of Presidential Libraries]] of the [[National Archives and Records Administration]] noted that the migration challenge facing the Clinton Library was compounded by information generated on more than one hundred separate executive branch computer systems. |
+ | |||
+ | The administration generated upwards of 40 million emails, an unprecedented number. Said Clinton Foundation chairman [[Skip Rutherford]], "The sheer volume of information from the Clinton administration is partly due to technology advancements." In ''Alexander v. FBI'' the White House came under scrutiny for deleting or improperly disposing of one million emails received during the presidency of [[Bill Clinton]]. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
− | * John Elvin, "Who Gets Custody of the White House E-mail Stash?" ''Insights on the News'' 17.6 (February 12, 2001): 34. | + | *John Elvin, "Who Gets Custody of the White House E-mail Stash?" ''Insights on the News'' 17.6 (February 12, 2001): 34. |
− | * Jennifer Lee, "Archiving Digital Records From the White House," New York Times, January 25, 2001. | + | *Mark Hall, "Presidential Librarians Prep for IT Challenges," ''Computerworld,'' 35.4 (January 22, 2001): 14. |
+ | *Jennifer Lee, "Archiving Digital Records From the White House," New York Times, January 25, 2001. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Clinton Archives]] |
Revision as of 16:33, 25 May 2008
The Clinton Electronic Records Project was established to preserve, protect, and organize all of the electronic records of the Clinton-Gore presidential administration. Sam Watkins is director of the Clinton Electronic Records Project.
Michelle Cobb of he Office of Presidential Libraries of the National Archives and Records Administration noted that the migration challenge facing the Clinton Library was compounded by information generated on more than one hundred separate executive branch computer systems.
The administration generated upwards of 40 million emails, an unprecedented number. Said Clinton Foundation chairman Skip Rutherford, "The sheer volume of information from the Clinton administration is partly due to technology advancements." In Alexander v. FBI the White House came under scrutiny for deleting or improperly disposing of one million emails received during the presidency of Bill Clinton.
References
- John Elvin, "Who Gets Custody of the White House E-mail Stash?" Insights on the News 17.6 (February 12, 2001): 34.
- Mark Hall, "Presidential Librarians Prep for IT Challenges," Computerworld, 35.4 (January 22, 2001): 14.
- Jennifer Lee, "Archiving Digital Records From the White House," New York Times, January 25, 2001.