Delaware Home to First Technology Inn of Court
Delaware's new Inn of Court is the first of its kind in the country. It aims to help judges, attorneys and students understand technology as a core competency within the law and stay abreast of new technologies and their effect on legal practice, especially in the area of e-discovery.Viewing the Corporate Office as a Crime Scene
Nowadays, when a corporation and its employees become the subjects of a government investigation, trained investigators will look at a company's office as a potential crime scene. Companies need to do likewise when refining their document policies.LexisNexis Moving E-Discovery to the Cloud
LexisNexis on Monday unveiled the cloud version of its Concordance Evolution document management software for litigation, the first of several e-discovery applications that will move online, leading to a new, all-in-one system to be revealed next year.Are E-Discovery Sanctions Tough Enough?
Sanctions are perhaps the most devastating penalty a judge can impose on a party in civil litigation. In e-discovery disputes, sanctions generate a lot of attention, but some judges say the impact is overstated. The problem is that EDD is like an auto accident -- low frequency, high impact.An Operating System for Law: Online Cases
Carl Malamud and other digital activists are piling up case law in public archives, moving toward a vision of the Web in which words in a given judge's decision are hyperlinked to other decisions, or to academic analysis, through the efforts of Internet users organized in social networking collectives.Drive Your Message Home With PowerPoint
Presentations should be sensual, engaging, exciting, varied, beautiful and kinetic, says computer forensics/EDD special master Craig Ball. Ball describes how to deliver them with Microsoft PowerPoint and shares some simple secrets and sins to avoid "Death by PowerPoint."Cloud Computing's Hidden Export Regulation Risks
While cloud-based services have become a valuable tool for improving efficiency, outdated government regulation leaves cloud users exposed to export regulation risks, says attorney Chad Breckinridge.High Court Finds High-Tech Persuasive
In Scott v. Harris, the U.S. Supreme Court found a video of a high-speed car chase persuasive in deciding whether an officer used unreasonable force in apprehending the driver. The legal community has been abuzz over whether this use of electronic evidence is a one-time deal or a new trend.Trending Stories
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