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]
...s changed since what Baron calls the dark ages of e-discoveryand not just the shift from paper to electronic platforms...
Originally Published: Corporate Counsel
...includes tablets, which are increasingly handling sophisticated applications, from document annotation to e-discovery. There are also the so-called convertibles: laptops that can morph...
By this time next year, we may be on the cusp of another major set of amendments to the discovery provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The U.S. Courts' Advisory Committee on Civil Rule
Originally Published: Law Technology News
...Parents are smarter than lawyers when it comes to e-discovery, because moms and dads focus on front-end behavior, rather than...
...electronically stored information (ESI) have struggled to find a way to make e-discovery more efficient, less expensive and more likely to yield relevant information...
...In the past year, I attended two high-level e-discovery conferences at which participants spoke of living in a "bubble...
How do forensic examiners determine data was taken? How do they figure out what storage devices were used to carry away ESI? How do they find clues of motive? The answer is "By many happy acciden
Originally Published: Law Technology News
...is the comedy of a major law firm being brought low by e-discovery. And there is the related wonderment of witnessing a $2.44...
Originally Published: Law Technology News
Daniel Martin Katz, assistant professor at Michigan State's School of Law, announced at an event hosted by Fordham University Law School that he is developing "a group of assassins" who are g
Originally Published: Law Technology News
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