New York Law Journal | Analysis
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | June 3, 2019
In their Federal E-Discovery column, Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discuss a recent decision from the District of Maryland which provides some guidance on the issue of whether organizations can be held accountable for lack of compliance with their own document retention policies when information otherwise not subject to a legal data preservation requirement has been lost in contravention of such policies.
By David J. Kessler and Susana Medeiros | May 31, 2019
The question is not whether a receiving party has a duty to take reasonable steps to protect data, but what is reasonable and proportionate in the context of the matters.
By James Murphy, Hanzo | May 29, 2019
New collaboration apps these apps are too easy not to engage with. Here are five critical problems that e-discovery professionals encounter with collaboration apps—and five best practices to counteract them.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Todd Heffner | May 28, 2019
Altering the default document-by-document privilege log is probably the best way to reduce the pain of privilege logs.
By Victoria Hudgins | May 28, 2019
Relativity and Cellebrite are partnering to deliver a streamlined mobile e-discovery experience that keeps all your GIFs, emojis and original format intact.
By Robert Cruz, Smarsh | May 23, 2019
A next-gen E-Discovery Playbook calls for the use of modern review technologies that are focused on understanding the data—not just how to improve the review rates of documents.
Legaltech News | Live Coverage|News
By Zach Warren | May 21, 2019
At the 2019 MER Conference, Sedona's Ken Withers and former federal judge Ron Hedges dove into some of the most interesting—and inexplicable—cases from the past year in e-discovery and electronic records.
The Legal Intelligencer | Live Coverage|News
By Zach Warren | May 21, 2019
At the 2019 MER Conference, Sedona's Ken Withers and former federal judge Ron Hedges dove into some of the most interesting—and inexplicable—cases from the past year in e-discovery and electronic records.
By Angela Morris | May 20, 2019
The district court found that Munoz committed discovery violations that delayed the case by two years through noncompliance with court orders, failing to produce documents, not appearing at hearings and being uncooperative in scheduling depositions.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Kramarsky | May 20, 2019
In his Intellectual Property column, Stephen M. Kramarsky discusses a recent SDNY decision involving unlawful access to electronically stored information, which can give rise to both state and federal claims for “hacking.” The employee in the case asserted those claims in both state and federal court. The doctrine of abstention provides federal courts a framework for exercising their discretion to abstain from adjudicating a matter, leaving it instead to the state court. However, in this case, SDNY declined to do so. Its opinion explains the bounds of the doctrine in this area, where the protections of state and federal law overlap.
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