By The Legal Intelligencer | February 12, 2019
In the Legal's E-Discovery supplement, read about legal holds and how oversight is key to preserving information, the use of technology to reduce the cost of e-discovery and the ethical duties involved in ESI.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Daniel E. Cummins | February 7, 2019
Over the past year, the Pennsylvania state trial and appellate courts have continued to grapple with issues pertaining to social media discovery as well as the admissibility of social media evidence at trial.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Kyle Campbell | February 1, 2019
In 2006, Wired magazine published an article about the advent of the e-discovery industry. In it, the author notes that many e-discovery vendors at the time provided very similar services—harvesting electronically-stored information (ESI), electronically de-duplicating the data, then posting it for attorney review in, what was then, a select number of web-accessible document review platforms
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By David R. Cohen | February 1, 2019
Litigation document review can be one of the most time-intensive parts of litigation, and comprises a large part of the work performed by many thousands of attorneys, across the U.S. and beyond.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Tess Blair, Tara Lawler and Josh Rosenzweig | February 1, 2019
The EDRM is a useful visualization that walks through each step of the discovery process, and it is also a useful tool for analyzing discovery-related processes to identify needed enhancements and potential problems.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Thomas Gricks | February 1, 2019
The weak link preventing technology-assisted review (TAR) from achieving its true potential is a lack of clarity surrounding the technology—the components, the development and the distinctions.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | January 31, 2019
Document review is, of course, a crucial phase in the production of discovery. Prior to the ascendance of computers, the documents involved would, typically, be contracts, letters, reports and other such documents, typed or handwritten and kept by the client in a file regarding the matter.
By C. Ryan Barber | January 30, 2019
Federal prosecutors are resisting a push from a defense team at Reed Smith to more widely share discovery material produced in a criminal case in Washington's federal trial court.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Dan Beaty, Lisa Goldstein and Kristopher Wasserman | January 30, 2019
Federal and state courts have weighed in and generally concur that e-discovery must be proportional to the matter. The question remains, what does that actually mean?
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Patrick Kennedy | January 29, 2019
When the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were updated in the late 2000s, the framers created a new category of information called ESI. Thanks to movies like "You've Got Mail," the E in that acronym became almost synonymous with one thing: email.
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