With over 90% of new information being stored electronically, and billions of emails being sent daily, key evidence is likely to be stored electronically, not on paper. Society’s increased reliance on computers poses new advantages and new challenges for the legal community, as information that used to be inaccessible is now available. More...
You’ve received a request for electronic discovery – where do you begin? In this paper we’ll look at how you can develop an eDiscovery response strategy for your corporation by gathering answers to five famous questions – who, what where, when, and why, and by forging strategic relationships with both internal and external resources. More...
In any random collection of electronic and scanned documents there exists a significant amount of duplicate information. While exact duplicate electronic documents are easily identified, similar-documents(or near-duplicates) are not absolutely identical and are consequently much more difficult to identify. Using technology to group similar-documents and code them in the same manner, rather than reviewing and coding them individually, can save significant document review time and ultimately reduce review costs. More...
Anton Piller Orders have been available as an option for litigators for quite some time (the first such order was issued in the case of Anton Piller KG vs Manufacturing Processes Limited in 1976). However, until lately, the issuance of an Anton Piller Order was quite rare. The relatively recent introduction of digital evidence into litigation, combined with digital data’s volatile nature, has led to a significant increase in motions for Anton Piller Orders. More...