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
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
Littler Mendelson's Philip M. Berkowitz writes that while policies permitting employees to use personal mobile devices for work-related data may be beneficial, there are still regulatory and EDD chal
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
A decade ago, document review was conducted in windowless rooms on paper stored in bankers' boxes. Now the bulk of document review takes place electronically, but to keep up with the enormous volume
Originally Published: The Legal Intelligencer
Pillsbury's Wayne Matus, John Davis, and Peter Ostovski ask: Should the concept of proportionality apply to preservation obligations? And, if so, how do you apply it? They add that a Southern Distric
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
The blawgosphere is atwitter with reactions to the Da Silva Moore v. Publicis Groupe & MSL Group plaintiffs' comments about United States District Court (New York) Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck in the
WilmerHale's Robert Trenchard and Steven Berrent consider what factors must be weighed in deciding whether -- and to what extent -- to disclose a party's review methods
Originally Published: New York Law Journal
2011 witnessed the democratization of e-discovery as new judicial voices emerged across the country
It wasn't long ago that Thomson Reuters' Westlaw Next initiative reminded me that the human element in computer-aided legal research is the key to accomplishing client goals. As with legal research,
...Victor Stanley Inc. v. Creative Pipe Inc., 269 F.R.D...
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