By Victoria Hudgins | July 8, 2021
With its acquisition of H5, Lighthouse CEO Brian McManus believes the company is well positioned to capitalize on a suddenly more tech-friendly legal department market.
By David Kalat, BRG | July 6, 2021
Not all collections are created equal. This month's history of cybersecurity explores how SafeBack and the forensic tools that followed it tackled collecting electronic evidence to maintain its reliability and validity.
By Scott McVeigh, Onna | June 29, 2021
It will not be long before we see Zoom data appearing as evidence in court. Legal teams and CIOs need to think about how to preserve Zoom data proactively for litigation case assessments, discovery, and holds, as well as investigations and regulatory actions.
By Alaina Lancaster | June 24, 2021
Facebook and plaintiffs counsel in the litigation stemming from the Cambridge Analytica scandal could enter settlement negotiations with a mediator as soon as September, but in light of persistent discovery disputes, the judge overseeing the case is unsure either side is "sober enough to know when the time is right to go into mediation."
By Victoria Hudgins | June 16, 2021
More intuitive and adaptive machine learning, with significant predictive analysis abilities, is likely to reshape the e-discovery field, technology providers say.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 15, 2021
Exterro bets that a focus on accelerating the speed of e-discovery review workflows—from automated document processing to evaluating reviewers—will allow it to stand out from the competition.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By By Eric Blinderman, Allison Chock, Andrew Cohen and Dai Wai Chin Feman | June 11, 2021
There is already a robust framework in place for courts and litigants to obtain evidence regarding legal finance arrangements. Mandatory disclosure of any legal finance arrangement will result in needless fishing expeditions with respect to those finance relationships.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Michael Riccardi | June 4, 2021
In a first-impression opinion, the justices placed boundaries on state agencies' actions to enforce administrative subpoenas.
By Michael Riccardi | June 4, 2021
In a first-impression opinion, the justices placed boundaries on state agencies' actions to enforce administrative subpoenas.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Ilene Sherwyn Cooper | June 4, 2021
In her Trusts and Estates Update, Ilene Sherwyn Cooper discusses Surrogate and Appellate court decisions from Q2 relating to such topics as discovery, assignments and gifts, and surcharge and assessment of legal fees for breach of fiduciary duty.
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