Recent posts on Google+ to 23 February

I intend to start periodic cross-links from here to my Google+ page to make sure that my posts there get picked  up.  The Google Plus posts are in no sense of lesser importance than what appears here, nor are they taking content away from the blog – I have done more blog posts so far in 2012 than by the same date in 2011.

They allow me quickly to cover a wider range of topics and, specifically, to point to other articles of interest with something slightly more substantial than a re-tweet.  If many of them have a US origin, that reflects the quality, as well as the quantity, of the material which derives from the US. Much of it has application in any jurisdiction where electronic discovery/disclosure is required.

The present interest in predictive coding, in information governance, and in data protection and privacy, for example, are all things which ought to be seen important in the UK as well – and elsewhere. If Singapore suddenly seems to be in the news, that reflects what I am hearing anecdotally as well as what I read.

A subsidiary purpose is the improvement in the SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) of both my own sites and those to which I link. It may be a coincidence, but my daily count of page views on the blog has risen from last year’s average of 189 to 263 since I started using Google+

The Google plus page is here.

Recent headings, largely self-explanatory, include:

  • Cowen Group survey predicts revenue spike for US law firm litigation support
  • Masters Conference announces new venue for 2012
  • Transborder Data Flow – it is not just the EU
  • UK High Court authorises service of proceedings via FaceBook
  • Siemens US chooses Recommind for eDiscovery
  • Big Data and the Future of the Legal Profession – Nuix videos from LegalTech 2012
  • UK plans phone and e-mail monitoring by every two-bit authority
  • Law Society attacks MoJ plans to increase fees in High Court and Court of Appeal
  • Craig Ball: Don’t forget IPD and OST files
  • Reminder: Lord Justice Jackson to give the SCL Annual Lecture on 26 March
  • Transparency turns down the ediscovery suspicion meter – Browning Marean
  • The most overused jargon in press release headlines
  • Some eDisclosure Questions and Answers in The Lawyer
  • Amendments to Singapore e-Discovery Practice Direction

More to come….

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About Chris Dale

Retired, and now mainly occupied in taking new photographs and editing old ones.
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