By Colleen Murphy | May 13, 2022
Judge R. Brooke Jackson of the District of Colorado said he was "'appalled' at lawyers 'playing fast and loose' with discovery obligations" and added they "turned this case sour with nasty litigation tactics."
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Saliann Scarpulla, Julie North and Scott Reents | May 10, 2022
The overhaul of its e-discovery rules positions the New York Commercial Division as a leader in this area and, as a result, an attractive forum for businesses looking to resolve their significant litigation matters.
By Isha Marathe | May 4, 2022
While the EU's data privacy obligations around the "right to delete" might have left some e-discovery professionals uneasy about the upcoming laws in the U.S., the impact of such a right is likely to be limited.
By Elizabeth Pollock-King, ProSearch | April 28, 2022
The informality of chat culture not only makes chat data harder to search, it also results in huge volumes of a new kind of data that must be processed in unique ways before it can be reviewed.
By Isha Marathe | April 27, 2022
Technology assisted review (TAR 2.0) may still face challenges in the market, but growing tech acceptance and court decisions could encourage its broader adoption.
By Elizabeth Pollock-King | April 26, 2022
Part One of a Two-Part Series The informality of chat culture not only makes chat data harder to search, it also results in huge volumes of a new kind of data that must be processed in unique ways before it can be reviewed.
By Zach Warren | April 26, 2022
E-discovery practitioners have increasingly used machine learning algorithms to cut down the time and money needed for review. Now, some are wondering just how well those algorithms can be applied across multiple matters.
By Emily M. McAdam | April 25, 2022
In the face of no controlling Arkansas case law on the matter, the Eighth Circuit made an "Erie-educated guess" as to what the Arkansas Supreme Court would do and held that Gerber could still establish proximate cause despite there being no resolution to the underlying case.
By Jon Berger, NimbleSystems | April 25, 2022
Dr. Jon Berger, co-founder of NimbleSystems, shares what he and his team have learned from overcoming discovery problems on MTBE, TCP, PFAS, PCE and other environmental contamination litigations on behalf of states.
By Zach Warren | April 20, 2022
"Legal technology has always been, and will remain, about the people. It's an exercise in how to use technology to make the people more efficient, precise, and creative," says Bill Johnson, CEO and founder of TCDI.
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