Legaltech News | Analysis|Slideshow
By Michele C.S. Lange | December 18, 2017
Hundreds of in-depth judicial opinions issued in 2017 set the stage for e-discovery practices in 2018.
By Michael Booth | December 15, 2017
A decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court requires judiciary administrators to begin notifying parties litigating professional malpractice claims of their statutory obligations to file affidavits of merit and to schedule hearings to determine whether those affidavits are satisfactory.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | December 15, 2017
Rosenbaum & Associates has sought old Morgan & Morgan commercials and client information in a false advertising suit.
By Gareth Evans, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and Philip Favro, Driven | December 15, 2017
The 2015 amendments had the potential to be transformative. So far, they have succeeded in part. Ambitious as they were, the amendments left unresolved several serious problems.
By Marcia Coyle | December 15, 2017
"The state of Washington has no business demanding nationwide data from some of the biggest private companies in the country," lawyers for Hobby Lobby Stores Inc. tell a federal judge in Tacoma, Washington.
By Ross Todd | December 13, 2017
Read the letter the U.S. attorney's office sent alerting Judge William Alsup to an explosive allegations a former Uber employee had passed to an in-house Uber attorney. The letter was unsealed and posted publicly Wednesday in the Waymo v. Uber docket.
By David Horrigan, Relativity | December 13, 2017
Whether it's high-profile litigants such as Taylor Swift or an e-discovery sanctions case making it to the US Supreme Court, data discovery has made it to legal prime time.
By Philip Favro, Driven | December 12, 2017
In Winfield, U.S. Magistrate Judge Katharine Parker provided direction on issues ranging from attorney work product and Sedona Principle Six to proportionality and active judicial case management.
By Ben Hancock | December 7, 2017
Uber is in the hot seat for its use of messaging apps such as Wickr with self-destruct features. But legal experts say evidence rules don't preclude such tools, and Wickr's CEO warns against "stigmatizing" information security.
By Mark Michels, Deloitte | December 7, 2017
Georgetown's “Discovery on Discovery: Both Sides of the V" panel explored whether the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure leave room for process-directed discovery.
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