New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Brian Lee | September 22, 2023
The requirement of third-party auditing for bias means enactment of the bill will come at a cost for employers, but the end result could be a net gain for them in many respects. including equality and incluision, said a labor and employment attorney. Others viewed the bill as overly sweeping.
By Guy Adams, Intapp | September 21, 2023
The firms with a decided advantage in the AI arms race will be those who are operating from a place of "connectivity," meaning that their internal operational teams are empowered to interact seamlessly. And this starts with an overlooked but crucial practice: good data hygiene.
By Corey Gildart, FTI Technology | September 19, 2023
As a best practice, legal teams and digital forensics experts should consider adding basic analytic reporting and visualizations to accompany departing employee logs.
By Isha Marathe | September 12, 2023
The evidence across the indictments against former President Donald Trump consists of a jigsaw puzzle of data types. For e-discovery experts, some data types will be more difficult to deal with than others.
By Todd Basile, Greenberg Traurig | September 1, 2023
Understanding the value of robotics data, and leveraging it while protecting its value, can open up new commercial opportunities and afford significant competitive advantages.
By Isha Marathe | August 31, 2023
Legaltech News caught up with John Shim, one of the founders of Case Chronology, to discuss how organizing medical legal documents can become a predictive tool for many institutions.
By Cassandre Coyer | August 30, 2023
While the Data Privacy Framework brings a new mechanism for e-discovery professionals to rely on during cross-border discovery, e-discovery attorneys still face stringent requirements from the GDPR and other upcoming EU regulations.
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion
By Mark G. McCreary | August 21, 2023
Often OCGs contain privacy and data security obligations that do not match the reality of practicing law and servicing a client. These obligations often come from an IT department or compliance professional who goes to extreme lengths to ensure they cannot be blamed if there is a data incident. This attitude and approach have created an OCG problem for law firms.
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion
By Scott Steinberg | August 15, 2023
Legal departments and companies in every geography and industry sector aren't just working to become more data literate, but also derive more value from the information that they're collecting and find more potential applications for it.
By Hugo Guzman | August 3, 2023
Cars "represent a private area in which people can enjoy a form of autonomy of decision, without encountering any external interferences. Today, as connected vehicles move into the mainstream, such a vision no longer corresponds to the reality," the European Data Protection Board said in a report.
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