By John Ansbach and Peter Vogel | February 12, 2015
This data-rich environment is no help unless and until IoT savvy counsel know where to look and how to access the information being produced for ediscovery.
By Joseph Fantini | February 12, 2015
In the not too distant future, will robots be capable of performing the jobs of the vast majority of the readers of this article? A recent study performed by The Boston Consulting Group, "The Shifting Economics of Global Manufacturing: How a Takeoff in Advanced Robotics Will Power the Next Productivity Surge," predicted that by 2025, the percentage of manufacturing jobs performed in the United States by automated "robots" will increase from the current 10 percent to 25 percent.
By Jeffrey R. Lilly | February 12, 2015
The proposed amendments are a positive step, but until there are consistent rules and application in all courts, thereby blunting the "gotcha" tactics, it is only the first of many steps needed to allow for reasonable document management policies.
By Lauren Schwartzreich | February 9, 2015
2014 rulings were not groundbreaking but signal adoption of amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
By Gail Gottehrer | February 9, 2015
Top magistrate judges analyze e-discovery problems at Driven Inc. panel.
By Alison Grounds | February 6, 2015
Technology is essential to managing the preservation, collection, filtering, review and production of electronically stored information in litigation.
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | February 3, 2015
H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison discuss 'Freedman v. Weatherford International', which involved a party seeking discovery of materials meant to test the sufficiency of the discovery methods used by a responding party.
By Eliot Davidoff | February 2, 2015
The use of multimatter repositories has emerged as a way to eliminate some of the data redundancy in-house legal teams are facing.
By Leonard Deutchman | February 2, 2015
At the close of 2014, readers of media discussing the intersection of the law and information technology were offered dozens of pieces summing up the past year and predicting what the future holds for us. Some pieces, of course, were better than others, and I have no interest in reviewing or ranking them. What struck me about them is the assumption underlying all of them that things have changed.
By Monica Bay | February 2, 2015
Big Law leaders need to go to more major league baseball games.
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