By Dan Clark | October 9, 2020
"I'm not trying to stop them from billing us, I want to help them get what they're looking for quickly and efficiently," Katie Lynch, director of legal support at Veolia North America, added at a Logikcull virtual conference.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | October 5, 2020
This Federal E-Discovery column by H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discusses the court's recent guidance on the use of technology-assisted review as part of e-discovery.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | October 1, 2020
With the pandemic having made in-person meetings or gatherings dangerous, digital tools built to satisfy all of the needs of persons to conduct business, have discussions and otherwise take the steps which comprise litigation were, at times, put into place to substitute those tools for the in-person gatherings through which litigation had traditionally been conducted.
By Jared Coseglia | September 30, 2020
A deep dive into the pre and post pandemic e-discovery job market landscape and what data privacy professionals can learn from ESI employment trends. Part Two of a Two-Part Article
By Victoria Hudgins | September 29, 2020
Enterprising corporate legal departments taking on e-discovery internally doesn't mean less business for ALSPs. But it does mean a different client relationship.
By Frank Ready | September 23, 2020
Two Relativity Fest panels examined how e-discovery professionals at state and federal agencies have had to accelerate efforts to manage ephemeral data and other information stemming from video conferencing and remote working platforms.
By Victoria Hudgins | September 23, 2020
Relativity Fest brought together a panel of judges to discuss the top cases in 2020 that impacted data collection and discovery, including whether the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure need to be updated.
By Sandeep Jadav, FTI Consulting | September 17, 2020
Challenges with ESI preservation and production are not new, but the scale of the problem posed by WeChat in certain China-related contexts is unique. Despite the potential treasure trove contained on the platform, getting access often ranges from tricky to impossible.
By Philip Favro, Driven | September 15, 2020
Livingston v. City of Chicago provides some general guidance on key TAR use issues that should be instructive for courts as they are called on to resolve disputes over TAR.
By Zach Warren | September 14, 2020
The Aero user interface, first announced at Relativity Fest last year, comes with an updated document viewer, workflow-based navigation settings, and the ability to automate workflows. The Aero update has come to RelativityOne users, with on-premise users needing to wait until 2022.
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