The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Patrick Kennedy | September 4, 2019
In the first three articles in this series, we focused on the ILC (identify, locate, collect) phase of discovery, as well as the process of what comes slightly before that phase in the form of preservation. Then we took a look at processing and review.
By Todd Heffner | August 30, 2019
Social media escapes an easy definition, but you know it when you see it.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Todd Heffner | August 30, 2019
Social media escapes an easy definition, but you know it when you see it.
By Legal Week | August 30, 2019
This week also sees Ashurst bolster its eDiscovery team.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark A. Berman | August 30, 2019
Who will pay for e-discovery expenses will often inform a litigation strategy. In his State E-Discovery column, Mark A. Berman discusses some recent decisions that provide litigators with guidance on the allocation of e-discovery costs.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | August 29, 2019
Kevin Spacey was on the island of Nantucket, Massachusetts, in summer 2016. Per the allegations of the complainant, an 18-year-old employee of a Nantucket restaurant, Spacey bought him alcohol and then, without the complainant's consent, groped him at the restaurant.
By Dan Panitz and H. Bruce Gordon | August 26, 2019
At what point does a Corporate Legal Department reach critical mass deserving of building, buying or renting e-discovery related-software, platforms and service provision capable of addressing your company's global litigation and investigation needs?
Legaltech News | Analysis|Live Coverage
By Rhys Dipshan | August 23, 2019
An ILTACON2019 panel looked at why TAR 2.0 doesn't mean the death of TAR 1.0, and why "technology-assisted" isn't synonymous with independent and automated.
By Victoria Hudgins | August 20, 2019
E-discovery-specific courses are slow to appear in law schools' course catalogs, but some argue e-discovery is becoming too common and too case-altering for schools to ignore.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Russell Yankwitt and Dina Hamerman | August 15, 2019
To combat the tension between litigation and skyrocketing litigation costs, the authors propose amending the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to comport with the position taken by many state courts, including New York, to stay all discovery upon the filing of a dispositive motion to dismiss a complaint.
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