By Zach Warren | October 24, 2017
Martin Tully and Philip Favro explored the navigation of data governance, ethics rules and more at Relativity Fest 2017.
By Christa Iannone, The MCS Group | October 24, 2017
To stay current in today's legal landscape, law firms have to find the best solution which fits their long-term business model.
By Zach Warren | October 23, 2017
The judges' panel at Relativity Fest 2017 explored spoliation for Taylor Swift, insurance metadata and the introduction of TAR to Australia.
Daily Business Review | Best Practices|News
By Samantha Joseph | Daily Business Review | October 19, 2017
A Broward law firm and its principal gained unauthorized access to the opposing side's computer network and GPS tracker.
By Rhys Dipshan | Legaltech News | October 19, 2017
The recapitalization will allow the company to offer review services and become an end-to-end e-discovery provider.
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion|Commentary
By Dan Panitz, Bruce (HB) Gordon and R Jason Straight | October 18, 2017
Anyone aware of current business news cannot avoid the flood of high visibility hacking and IP intrusion/theft. The issues have grown so ubiquitous that it isn't shocking to hear U.S. companies and government agencies suffered a record 1,093 data breaches in 2016 alone, a 40-percent increase from 2015.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Commentary Francesca Russo and Robert R. Jimenez | October 17, 2017
Electronic discovery has changed how attorneys think about preservation of evidence. Gone are the days of filing cabinets where documents can be locked away, safe from loss. Lawsuits today are won and lost on electronically stored information (ESI), which can be deleted or overwritten by a party's computer system automatically and unintentionally.
By Tony Mauro | National Law Journal | October 16, 2017
In a case closely watched by the tech industry, the justices could unwind a Second Circuit decision that held data stored overseas is beyond the reach of U.S. law enforcement.
By Leonard Deutchman | October 5, 2017
The court found that the defendant's failure to produce e-discovery within the court's timetable was without justification, and that the defendant's attempts to justify its actions to the plaintiff and the court were "obfuscation," yet it imposed only limited sanctions upon the defendant under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b), specifically refusing to impose punitive sanctions. In this article, I will explore how prevalent the court's reasoning is and the consequences to litigation.
By Ed Silverstein | December 11, 2015
'The ranking process is the magic behind TAR. Ranking documents by likelihood of relevance, allows you to structure the review in a more efficient way.'
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