The Daily Report
What happened to Qualcomm wasn't the first case of e-discovery gone wrong but it might have been the most incredible. For months leading up to a January 2007 patent infringement trial, two California
What happened to Qualcomm wasn't the first case of e-discovery gone wrong, but it might have been the most incredible. Alan Cohen presents five lessons that Qualcomm and its general counsel learned t
What happened to Qualcomm wasn't the first case of e-discovery gone wrong, but it might have been the most incredible. Alan Cohen presents five lessons that Qualcomm and its general counsel learned t
Even if Qualcomm's e-discovery blunders were innocent, they were costly-and avoidable. Here's how other law departments can do better
Number of court or-ders issued to date in United States v. Philip Morris Inc. et al.: 509. Number of pages of documents exchanged in discovery: 40 million. Potential sum at stake: $289 billion
...the bad. "This definitely reflects the wave of the future," says Jonathan Redgrave, of counsel in the Washington, D.C., office of Jones, Day, Reavis...
Corporate America has lost control of its electronic data. E-mails, memos and spreadsheets are filling up servers at a breakneck pace, and the plaintiffs' bar is going after the data with an unpreced
...the bad. "This definitely reflects the wave of the future," says Jonathan Redgrave, of counsel in the Washington, D.C., office of Jones, Day, Reavis...
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