Proper electronic discovery assumes ever-greater importance as our electronic-data piles needed for litigation keep growing. Over 90 percent of all information is now electronic, according to the American Bar Association Digital Evidence Project and The National Law Journal, and 70 percent of that information has never been printed.

The largest and often most onerous portion of this mountain of data is e-mail. According to MIT’s Center for Technology, Policy, and Industrial Development, 50 percent of the evidence in court cases is e-mail, and U.S. companies spend $4.6 billion a year to analyze it.

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