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.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 3, 2021
Intrigued by e-discovery tech provider Reveal's recent acquisitions, Catherine "Cat" Casey recently left DISCO to help guide the company's growth.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | May 28, 2021
Should hyperlinks, especially ones to documents in an internal file system, be considered attachments? Must the documents the hyperlinks lead to be produced as email attachments—even if they may already also be somewhere else in the production? In this edition of their Federal E-Discovery column, Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discuss a recent decision that answered these questions clearly: no.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | May 27, 2021
Prior to the pandemic, there was a familiar theme with regard to e-discovery. Clients and their law firms producing e-discovery would fail in some way—take too long, miss important documents, and so on—and would respond to motions and criticism generally with the claim that they cannot do what is being demanded of them.
Litigation Daily | Expert Opinion
By Phillip Aurentz and Aimee Fagan | May 19, 2021
Little creates as much havoc in civil litigation as an ill-conceived or misunderstood protective order. Aimee Fagan and Phillip Aurentz of Sidley Austin have some tips to avoid common pitfalls.
By Philip Favro, Driven | May 13, 2021
Recent case law continues to reflect key trends in e-discovery, ranging from the propriety of forensic examinations to ESI spoliation.
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