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]
Just settling upon an agreed list of queries with your adversary may not assure a meeting of the minds, when it comes to documents found through e-discovery. The parties must be clear about the dispo
BD uses Symantec's Serengeti Tracker software to detect broad trends by tracking IP, patent applications and transactional work worldwide
...Six Things In-House Counsel Must Know About E-Discovery The big-pictures trends and what clients...
...s changed since what Baron calls the "dark ages" of e-discovery and not just the shift from paper to electronic platforms...
...presenters at these events preach fear as the motivation for learning about e-discovery. Happened just last week. What are the fears? Let's see...
... The event, "A Consortium on Litigation, Information Law & E-Discovery," was co-sponsored by Thomson Reuters and the Electronic Discovery...
Amendments to the discovery provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are being considered. The most significant — and controversial — of the proposals would narrow the scope of
...slash case preparation time and costs. "Part of the challenge in e-discovery is the prevalence of large amounts of unstructured data," Gillis...
...E-discovery costs have dramatically changed the dynamics in all manner of litigation...
...preservation and sanctions," the notes explain, "was sparked by the e-discovery panel at the Duke conference in May 2010. That panel discussion...
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