There is no doubt that the hot topic at the moment is predictive coding following Judge Peck’s written Opinion of last week.
The rest of the eDiscovery world does not, alas, take time out to clear the stage for any one big topic, and I have captured on my Google Plus page some of the articles and points which have arisen in other areas. It is like bailing a leaky boat – as fast as I get things out of my store of interesting things to come back to, more comes in at the bottom.
I have no particular ambition to catch it all, and most of it is readily available as it happens on Twitter. Whilst we now know that Twitter is flogging off our old tweets for advertisers to mine, the reality for most of us is that what rushes past is lost as soon as it reaches the bottom of the Twitter screen. It seems worth capturing some of it as it goes. Today’s articles include, in no particular order:
AccessData describes the new Summation hardware and architecture
Second Phase of Nuix Proof Finder – work, learn and raise money for charity all at once
The UK Bribery Act – are you ready to explain tone at the top
Registration opens for ILTA 2012 in Washington D.C: ac2dc
Legal Technology Insider Empire expands to AsiaPac
KM World: 100 Companies which matter in Knowledge Management
Judge Peck and Judge Facciola lead mock trial on user authentication
eDJ Group and InnoxCell join forces for Hong Kong eDiscovery Exchange
The common interest of legal and IT in e-mail management
That is a pretty wide range of topics to fit under the general heading eDiscovery, and barely scratches the list of things to cover.
In between all this, and rather less seriously, a three-way exchange was running on Twitter about Mr Cameron, Rebekah Brooks and the ex-police horse Raisa. I wrote about that here:
