Electronic discovery focuses heavily on producing accurate results for opposing counsel. Identifying privileged information may well be the biggest target for e-discovery. In distant second place comes the effort put forth by producing parties to cull non-relevant data from the set. Sure, some lawyers do invest time and resources removing clearly non-relevant data from the set but marking documents relevant to the case would be much like tipping a strong hand in a poker game. Culling the data based on relevancy would be very risky;the producing lawyer doesn’t know what opposing council views as non-relevant beyond common characteristics such as: custodians, dates, and the broad issues at hand.

Predictive Coding Fills the Glass

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