E-Discovery Experts on Latest Inadvertent Disclosure From Jan. 6 Committee: 'Who's QC-ing This?!'
For now, where the blame falls for the mistake of exposing thousands of Social Security numbers is unclear. But for e-discovery professionals, this blunder "goes to show that the roles and responsibilities really do need to be defined ... because the impact is substantial."
January 12, 2023 at 06:29 PM
4 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Legal Tech News
When the Jan. 6 committee released hundreds of records, including audio recordings and interview transcripts, online last week, it failed to redact nearly 2,000 Social Security numbers of high-profile individuals who visited the White House in December 2020 from a spreadsheet.
A former Jan. 6 committee aide told The Washington Post that committee "records released publicly underwent a review process to redact personal details and other sensitive information," adding, "any release of such information was inadvertent."
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