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Recent Posts
- RelativityOne Asia expansion continues with South Korea hosting
- Farewell to Robert Childress, the eDiscovery events organiser who knew everybody
- Legal Futures webinar: Dominic Regan on the extension of the Disclosure Pilot Scheme
- KPMG brings RelativityOne to Singapore
- Relativity investment to support cloud-based eDiscovery and AI
- Remote hearings – slipping back into the old normal after all that investment and experience
- Making the most of it as we go into a second year of virtual events
- Legal Tech Conference 2021 from Dublin on 25 March
- More occasional notes on eDiscovery and related subjects – 8 February 2021
- Relativity turns its AI skills to Pandemic analytics
- Rather more than a week’s eDiscovery notes
- New integration between RelativityOne and X1 accelerates preservation and collection
- Two document destruction judgments in England and Wales
- Phones 4U – a proportionate way to deal with documents of third-party custodians
- Redaction – good news from Relativity but less good for some others
About this site
Category Archives: Canadian Courts
Twitter Takeover on 18 October for Technology in Practice in Toronto
Technology in Practice is a large event dedicated to eDiscovery and related topics. It is run by Ricoh and by Commonwealth Legal, and takes place in Toronto between 8 and 10 November. Tomorrow, 18 October, I will be taking over … Continue reading
Lessons from Applied Discovery Proportionality panel in Toronto
It sounds a bit flippant to say that I went to Toronto for breakfast. It certainly would not do as an answer to the immigration official asking the purpose of my visit. Readers with long memories may recall two earlier … Continue reading
International eDiscovery Panel at CEIC
There is one major difference between the general run of discovery problems and those relating to international and cross-border discovery. The former are soluble – competence and co-operation coupled with judicial management would fix most ediscovery problems tomorrow; the trans-jurisdictional … Continue reading
CEIC 2010 comes to an end
CEIC 2010 is winding down here in Las Vegas. Whatever measure you take – the quality of the sessions, the opportunity to catch up with people and meet new ones, the sheer numbers of people attending (1,300 or so), the … Continue reading
Catching up with the new Ontario E-Discovery Rules of Civil Procedure
I missed the new Ontario E-Discovery Rules of Civil Procedure which came into effect on 1 January. By “missed”, I mean that I knew about them but decided that it was a topic important enough to be put on one … Continue reading