Fix Those Leaks with Added Document Security
The term document can refer to any number of things. Regardless of what type of business you are in, somewhere or somehow you have documents of some kind. A document can be an interoffice memo, employee personnel records, an invoice containing purchase information, a draft press release or the office electrical bill. Whatever it may be, it’s likely that it contains some sort of sensitive information that you don’t want floating around for anyone to see.
If you operate in retail, you don’t want your customer’s credit card information to fall into the wrong hands, or maybe you’re working on a secret new invention that will change technology forever, you certainly don’t want your competitors picking up on the details. Any business, or organization for that matter, has a need to keep its documents secure and if there are any doubts, just ask the current situation facing the U.S. Military.
As it has been well noted by the media, roughly 76,000 pages of classified documents related to the war in Afghanistan were leaked to, and then posted on, a website known as WikiLeaks. The founder