The case for restraint in the electronic age
For all the importance that lawyers place on being rational, they can be an awfully irrational bunch when it comes to technology, says Milberg attorneys Henry J. Kelston and Ariana J. Tadler, with Pa
Steve Green, chief of staff of Hudson Legal, and Mark Yacano, executive vice president at the company, review an article that is widely cited for its conclusion that technology-assisted review can be
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
Law professor Michael J. Hutter looks at a seminal New York appellate court decision, Servotronics, that provides a means to avoid waiver of the attorney-client privilege when privileged material is
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
A road map to get your judge to "yes" on technology-assisted review
The Federal Judicial Center has updated its Managing Discovery of Electronic Information: A Pocket Guide for Judges to reflect significant changes in case law and trends, writes LTN Editor-in-Chief M
...CooperationWhat Is It and Why Do It?, XVIII Rich. J. L. & Tech. 8 (2012), ...
Technology has led to an explosion in the amount of electronically stored information. Litigators and legal departments face the challenge of keeping discovery costs under control while avoiding pot
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
Judge Shira A. Scheindlin and computer forensics consultant Jeffrey Rabkin examine the recently released "Recommendations for ESI Discovery in Federal Criminal Cases.
...More Effective And More Efficient Than Exhaustive Manual Review," XVII Rich. J.L. & Tech 11 (2011)). Like human review, however...
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