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E-Mail Analytics Eases Burden of Discovery
Given that e-mail is often where key evidence is found, it makes sense to target it. Enter e-mail analytics, which refers to creating a visual rather than text-based breakdown of e-mail. Applying e-mail analytics to e-discovery saves time and effort -- which translates to money.Lawyer in High Court Gene Patent Case Grabs Headlines
Advances in genetic science collided with entrenched ideas about nature and unsettled questions in patent law in recent Supreme Court cases, all brought by the same person: 38-year-old IP lawyer (and newly litigious investor) Daniel Ravicher of the Public Patent Foundation.Future of the Legal Profession: Adapting to Change
From Blackberry to Facebook to iPad to cloud computing, technology is propelling our profession forward and forcing us to re-think how we train lawyers and structure our business models. New York State Bar President Stephen P. Younger created a task force to respond to these new challenges and to lay out a roadmap for the future.EU Court Orders Microsoft to Divulge Trade Secrets
A Wednesday ruling by a European Union court thwarts Microsoft's attempt to delay, pending appeal, implementation of the EU's landmark antitrust decision in March. The decision demanded the software giant release trade secrets to competitors and offer Windows operating system software stripped of its Media Player. The company has already paid a record $666 million fine. Microsoft said it hopes to reopen settlement talks. The appeals process could take up to five years.View more book results for the query "*"
Walking Tech's Cutting Edge to Master Client Files
An electronic records management system helps a law firm maintain client files in ways that reduce ethical, malpractice and compliance risks. David Reyman explains how lawyers, not known to regularly walk tech's cutting edge, can master new strategies to manage the virtual clutter of case documents.Time to Revisit the Ethics of Metadata
Fried Frank's Michael de Leeuw and Eric Hirsch argue the time is ripe for the New York State Bar Association Committee on Professional Ethics to reassess a lawyer's ethical obligations concerning metadata.HBR Consulting Survey Shows Law Department Spending Is Up
A 2012 survey by HBR Consulting reports that law departments are expanding workloads and opening up their wallets as companies worldwide have increased total legal spending by five percent, returning to 2009 survey levels.E-Discovery Threatens to 'Litigize' Arbitration
Commercial arbitration has become as costly and almost as slow as litigation, says arbitrator Richard Chernick. The main culprit has been identified as discovery cost and abuse: EDD is the poster child for the "litigization" of arbitration and the source of rapidly increasing costs.Keeping Your Firm's E-Discovery In-House
The high stakes involved in handling electronic discovery often compel corporate counsel to outsource e-discovery at considerable cost. But there are strong arguments for managing e-discovery in-house, and it takes a special breed of employee, someone "bilingual" in data and legal matters.Trending Stories
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