By Thomas Zacharia|2022-05-02T17:28:12+00:00May 2nd, 2022|Collections, ediscovery, Information Governance, Litigation, Litigation Support|0 Comments
Do I need an eDiscovery Vendor? Likely, Yes.
Do I Need an E-discovery Vendor? Likely, Yes. Thursday, February 17, 2022 Most, if not all, cases brought today involve e-Discovery. Nearly everyone texts, emails, and uses ephemeral messaging apps. Think about how little you see people interacting face to face these days – not just because of COVID-19 but because of the tech boom, and [...]
Basics of eDiscovery
In the early days of e-discovery, companies typically outsourced most activities to third parties, namely law firms and service providers, who actually did the e-discovery work. A significant legal trend in recent years has been an increase in the number of companies attempting to bring more of the e-discovery process in house. What is eDiscovery? [...]
Key COVID-19 Considerations for U.S. Discovery and Information Governance
The following is a brief overview of an article by Gilbert S. Keteltas and James A. Sherer, "Key COVID-19 Considerations for U.S. Discovery and Information Governance," posted in Information Governance. Many businesses have remote work and bring-your-own-device policies that address access to company systems and information from personal devices. These policies may also state expectations [...]
Don’t Produce ESI as a Few PDFS Over 8,000 Pages
Josh Gilliland is a California attorney who focuses his practice on eDiscovery. He posted a blog titled, "Don't Produce ESI as a Few PDFS Over 8,000 Pages." Below is an overview. There are some significant "don'ts" in civil litigation. Printing ESI before scanning it as a few PDFs totaling 8,000 pages for production is one of them. [...]
The Great Pandemic Leap
The following is a summary of the blog, The Great Pandemic Leap, which Craig Ball posted in Computer Forensics, E-Discovery, General Technology Posts. Law firms and courts have made much of the "Great Pandemic Leap." The Pandemic proved to get lawyers who were not tech-savvy to move forward. The alleged leap had nothing to do [...]