Electronic discovery (or e-discovery, eDiscovery) refers to discovery in civil litigation which deals with the exchange of information in electronic format (often referred to as Electronically Stored Information or ESI).[1] Usually (but not always) a digital forensics analysis is performed to recover evidence. A wider array of people are involved in eDiscovery (for example, forensic investigators, lawyers and IT managers) leading to problems with confusing terminology.[1]
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Companies are increasingly using computer forensics to investigate the who, what, when, where, and why of data theft by departing employees
In the sudden acceleration cases against Toyota, there are confidential documents and highly confidential documents. And then there are the company's "crown jewels" the source software
Originally Published: National Law Journal
...Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck, a jurist highly regarded for his knowledge of e-discovery, held that a party could be compelled to use predictive coding...
Originally Published: The Legal Intelligencer
...a great deal of press and has been the talk of the e-discovery community. Its holdings and dicta have been supported by many practitioners...
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
...iConect Development, a provider of e-discovery software products and services for the legal industry, ...
...that we continue to operate in the 1 percent bubble and the e-discovery community needs to find better ways to reach out to the...
Additional plaintiffs' lawyers in the sudden acceleration cases against Toyota could win access to Toyota's coveted source code software following a federal judge's orders on Wednesday
Originally Published: National Law Journal
...Techshow in Chicago, where the vibe was very much different. Instead of e-discovery, the overarching theme of Techshow was practice management, in all its...
Stephen Treglia, legal counsel at Absolute Software Corp., writes that in a recent Ninth Circuit decision, advanced technology upset another long-standing applecart: the relatively unfettered ability
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
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