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- Pitching it just right at Relativity Fest London
- Relativity expands its Justice for Change program to EMEA and its philanthropic initiatives with Microsoft
- The conflict between eDiscovery and GDPR – Norra Stockholm Bygg AB
- Relativity Predictions Webinar – Q1 2023
- Revisiting useful old judgments: deleted messages and adverse inferences
- Ireland’s Legal Tech Conference 2022 on 29 November in Dublin
- AI and Data Management lead the story at Relativity Fest
- A full agenda at Relativity Fest from 26-28 October in Chicago and online
- Wrapping up two UK disclosure cases which caught the public eye
- Farewell to Charles Christian, who brought legal technology to lawyers
- Interlocutory orders and contempt – the “burn it” judgment
- Relativity acquires Heretik for contract review and intelligence
- Cabo Concepts v MGA – lack of disclosure supervision brings indemnity costs order
- A glut of disclosure stories just as I turn my back
- Disclosure duties and audit – not as easy as some may think
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Category Archives: eDisclosure
Law Society regional e-Disclosure training
The Law Society has just published the programme and venue listings for its electronic disclosure training series under the title E-disclosure – the rules, the practice and the benefits. This begins in London on 13 May and goes to Birmingham, … Continue reading
ILTA INSIGHT 2008
ILTA INSIGHT 2008 takes place on 15 April at the Hilton London Tower Bridge. I will be speaking there with Mark Surguy of Pinsent Masons and HHJ Simon Brown QC in a session to report on the progress which has … Continue reading
E-discovery progress in Australia
There is a more than theoretical interest in what is happening in disclosure in other jurisdictions. We are all facing the same challenges, and it is helpful to know what the problems, and the perceived solutions, are in far-away places … Continue reading
Attracting readers for electronic disclosure
I do not have any sophisticated means of tracking the visitors to this blog, but WordPress shows me which pages have been read how many times and allows me to distinguish between real views and those made by crawlers and … Continue reading
Relevant is irrelevant to standard Disclosure
I spend a sadly disproportionate amount of my life touring the Web with the aid of Google, looking for things which are relevant to disclosure of documents, and in particular electronic disclosure. Look, I even talk like Part 31 of … Continue reading
Women in e-Discovery
Rumour reaches me of the foundation of a UK group called Women in e-Discovery run, I assume, on lines similar to the successful US group of the same name. I would love to tell you more, but no-one has told … Continue reading
Posted in Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery
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Epiq Systems buys Pinpoint Global
Epiq Systems, who have recently released DocuMatrix 12, the international version of their document review software, have announced the further expansion of their UK business with the acquisition of Pinpoint Global Ltd. Pinpoint are best known for their proprietary processing … Continue reading
LDM shows CaseMap integration
Regular readers will know that I am an enthusiast for CaseMap as a low-cost tool both for its primary purpose – the linking of litigation facts to issues – and as a simple way to handle disclosure. If today’s postings … Continue reading
Judge how CaseMap gets to the issues
I went to Birmingham last week with LexisNexis to show a judge what CaseMap can do. Why is it important for judges to see solutions like this, and what is CaseMap’s role in handling the issues in litigation? Part of … Continue reading
LiST publishes draft Disclosure Statement
The LiST Group has published a draft revised Disclosure Statement on its Publications page. The draft was submitted to the DCA (as was) in 2006 with a view to kick-starting a discussion about this under-regarded element in the disclosure process. … Continue reading
Judge strikes out
It is a source of curiosity to US and Australian litigation lawyers that we in the UK have so little case law on pre-trial procedures. District Judge Solomon Dredd made an order at a Case Management Conference today which should … Continue reading
Posted in Case Management, Court Rules, Courts, CPR, eDisclosure
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How do I find out about electronic disclosure?
The e-Disclosure Information Project began in response to a perceived need for different players in the e-disclosure field to know more about what the others were doing. In the last few months, I have heard or heard of things like: … Continue reading
LiST Group expands
I have written appreciatively about the work of the Litigation Support Technology Group – LiST – on my web site. LiST is a think-tank, whose members – all skilled and experienced litigation support people in law firms and analogous organisations … Continue reading
Directions initiative in Birmingham
Practitioners in the Birmingham Mercantile Court are being sent a draft order for directions which includes provisions aimed at tighter case management. Why is this useful, and what if you genuinely think that the proposed order should not apply in … Continue reading
H5 gets safe harbor certification
H5, the high-end provider of automated document analysis and information risk management services for the legal industry, has obtained safe harbor certification from the US Federal Trade Commission. Most US companies whose business involves handling EU-derived data now have such … Continue reading
Summation back in the UK
Summation is one of the older litigation support software companies – it was founded in 1988. It has made a few attempts to break into the UK market but these fizzled out mainly (to my eye) for lack of a … Continue reading
Defensibility of the UK e-Disclosure process
Do the UK courts ever question the manner in which electronic evidence was collected? It is a source of much contention in the US but we have little case law directly on the point here. It is clearly vital to … Continue reading
Another e-Disclosure event in Birmingham
A second talk to Law Society members in Birmingham revealed more enthusiasm for electronic disclosure than one might expect given the amount actually done. How do we translate that enthusiasm into action? The only action required is to ask a … Continue reading
Posted in Case Management, Commercial Court, Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Outsourcing
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Anacomp captures new sources of information
Anacomp announces new alliances which bring hosted capture to its already broad range of services. The trend towards a one-stop shop will appeal to many. Anacomp, best known until last year for its docHarbor document repository, has taken a further … Continue reading
E-Disclosure conferences in London 2008
There are several e-Disclosure conferences in London this year, including a couple which have not been seen in this space for a bit. Conference organisers have a keen eye for what is topical and have obviously decided that 2008 is … Continue reading
The Qualcomm CREDO Program
The judge who heard the sanctions part of the Qualcomm case set out a program for devising an action plan to prevent future disclosure violations. UK companies may like to measure their own preparedness against it. On 30 January I … Continue reading
Discovering what to do about e-disclosure
The paucity of blog postings recently does not imply that there is nothing to write about On the contrary, there is too much going on to stop and write it all up. A quick summary of what has come up … Continue reading
UK judge flies e-Disclosure flag in New York
His Honour Judge Simon Brown QC of the Birmingham Mercantile Court went to New York last week to take part in a judicial panel on the subject of eDisclosure. The resulting debate should make audiences sit up on both sides … Continue reading
An effective remedy for prolixity
I reported earlier today (Commercial Court judges set out their case management intentions) on the Commercial Court judges’ intention to limit the length of pleadings, witness statements etc as part of their firm commitment to cut the crap (they did … Continue reading
Posted in Case Management, Commercial Court, Courts, eDisclosure, eDiscovery
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Commercial Court judges set out their case management intentions
A well-attended meeting of the Commercial Litigators’ Association on Monday was left in no doubt that the Commercial Court judges intend to follow closely the recommendations of the Commercial Court Long Trial Working Party Allen & Overy were the hosts … Continue reading
Networking thoughts after LegalTech
The LegalTech cud is still being chewed. The graph below show page views on this blog down to today, with an encouraging upward trend. The actual visits are not huge in absolute terms – 163 page views on one day … Continue reading
The Portability of H5’s Process
Contrary to my assumptions, H5’s very different approach to document review can be made available in the UK on data hosted here. Those with bigger cases should consider adding H5 to their list of possible solutions I had breakfast with … Continue reading
EPIQ Systems and ECM join forces
A long working relationships between Epiq Systems and Effective Case Management (ECM) reached a natural culmination on 1 February when the two businesses were combined. Tony Ratcliffe, the founding owner of ECM becomes a member of Epiq’s London office team.
LDSI and LiveReview
I am not sure how I have worked in the litigation support industry for 15 years without meeting Noel Kilby, nor why it should, eventually, have been easier to do so in LDSI’s office in New York when we are … Continue reading
Howrey sets up in India
Howrey, the US and global law firm known as much for its trial and litigation support services as for its legal practice, has opened an office in Pune, India, to handle its document management and similar functions. This, as the … Continue reading
Guidance on the Human Factor in eDiscovery
My first port of call in New York last week was Patrick Burke, Assistant General Counsel at Guidance Software. I did a webinar with Patrick over Christmas (Americans don’t really do Christmas I discover – the last e-mail in on … Continue reading
Basketball pointers for litigation management
eDiscovery Tools is an Australian company which makes software for processing e-mail and other electronic documents for litigation and similar purposes. Its main product is eDiscovery Processor, used by law firms, corporate clients, government departments and litigation support bureaux to … Continue reading
Trilantic sessions round off LegalTech
As in previous years, Trilantic organised three sessions for the last day of LegalTech. They are generally less formal than the other sessions and, as I have said elsewhere, take important subjects with a light tone. I thought I would … Continue reading
Trilantic delivers Translation Services
Trilantic has launched Trilantic Translation Services (TTS) which, they say, is the first translation service which uses the accuracy of human translation with the power of technology. TTS is described as a robust, highly effective, fast translation service [which] is … Continue reading
Trilantic sets out EU Data Protection Rules
The EU Data Protection Rules – Directive 95/46/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council – On the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data to give … Continue reading
Anacomp and IPRO announce strategic alliance
Anacomp has announced an alliance with IPRO which will integrate IPRO’s eCapture software application into CaseLogistix. Anacomp does rather good press releases this days and I cannot better their own description The integration between IPRO eCapture and CaseLogistix eliminates batch … Continue reading
Anacomp introduces hosted CaseLogistix
Anacomp, the business process solutions company which acquired CaseLogistix last year, has announced that it is now making CaseLogistix available on-demand via its hosted docHarbor information platform. CaseLogistix was anyway one of the most interesting litigation support review applications on … Continue reading
Why no UK lawyers at LegalTech?
“When does the full LegalTech blog get released” asks a reader, obviously impatient with my chatty discursive wanderings around the subject. I assume he expects a full narrative, starting at Session 1 on Day 1 and ending with an extended … Continue reading
Service with a snarl undoes technology miracles
Good technology must be matched by good people, and it is often the people who let it down. Any technology budget must include a large element for support and training. It is not just the salesmen who need a good … Continue reading
Pocketing the key technology at LegalTech
My new Blackberry helps me organise what is important. It does not decide what is important. The same should be true of e-disclosure applications. Both are an aid to efficient processes, not a substitute for them. My heading may have … Continue reading
Feeling at home back at LegalTech in New York
You come to this site, I know, for sharp, incisive, witty stuff about the e-disclosure world, the court rules, the case law, the new developments. There is plenty of that at LegalTech here in New York, but those who do … Continue reading
Legal Technology Awards 2008
The Legal Technology Awards 2008 happened five days and an ocean away – two oceans, in fact, one called the Atlantic and one poured from various bottles on both sides of the Atlantic. Both time and tide mean that my … Continue reading
Posted in eDisclosure, eDiscovery, LegalTech, Litigation Support, Trilantic
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Long Trials trial gets longer trial
Mr Justice Andrew Smith, Judge in Charge of the Commercial Court, has issued a statement about the Report of the Commercial Court Long Trials Recommendations. The Recommendations will be put into practice from 1 February. The trial period, however, will … Continue reading
Posted in Commercial Court, Court Rules, CPR, eDisclosure, Litigation Support
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The cost of printing electronic documents
Charles Christian’s Orange Rag has a helpful article called Think before you Print which sets out the costs of printing documents for review – which involve more than the bare printing costs. It is by no means a finger-wagging, tut-tutting … Continue reading
The impact of Qualcomm for UK lawyers
The sanctions judgment in Qualcomm v Broadcomm emphasises for UK lawyers the apparent conflict between their duty to ensure that their clients give full disclosure and their parallel obligation to keep disclosure proportionate. The two duties are not in fact … Continue reading
Discovery Mining passes source code audit
Discovery Mining has announced that the source code of its Web-hosted online review application has passed a rigourous security audit. The security of the data we put into the hands of others is a hot topic at the moment, as … Continue reading
Spotting the turning-point at the starting-point
The main character in the film The Butterfly Effect explores every possible event in his search for the right answer, only identifying the correct turning point at the end of the last reel, after much unnecessary tribulation. The aim of … Continue reading
E-Disclosure – What does the court expect?
His Honour Judge Simon Brown QC told a London conference audience what the UK courts expect from those who appear before them when electronic disclosure is a big element in a case. I have written separately about the conference organised … Continue reading
Growing interest in e-disclosure sources
A picture, they say, is worth a thousand words, so to save a lot of typing, I give you the graph which my Blog host, WordPress, produces to show the hits since I began the blog a year ago. The … Continue reading
Intimidation by Terabyte – scope of e-disclosure
The judgment in Hands v Morrison Construction Services Ltd [2006] may have related to the special circumstance of an application for pre-action disclosure in the TCC, but it has some messages applicable to e-disclosure generally We are very short on … Continue reading
Posted in Case Management, Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Litigation Support
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Debating the Aikens Report
I wrote on Friday (Give more credit to the Aikens Recommendations) with a more positive view of the Long Trial Report and Recommendations than had been given by John Reynolds of White & Case (Aikens misses the big picture) in … Continue reading
Posted in Commercial Court, Court Rules, Courts, CPR, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Litigation Support
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Irish Court rules on data extraction
Anyone involved in electronic discovery may be interested in a decision of the Irish Supreme Court in Dome Telecom v Eircom. The point at issue was whether a party can be required to create a document as part of the … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, eDisclosure, Litigation Support
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Give more credit to the Aikens Recommendations
John Reynolds, a partner in White & Case, shows less than enthusiasm for the Commercial Court Long Trials Report and Recommendations in an article published yesterday on Legal Week’s web site. The Recommendations deserve more credit. The article, headed Aikens … Continue reading
Posted in Commercial Court, Court Rules, Courts, CPR, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Litigation Support
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Marcus Evans conference – E-Discovery Strategies
A good e-Disclosure conference will make you want to know more or, at least, will ring an alarm bell in due course. There are pitfalls to know about and practice development opportunities being missed. I am just back from a … Continue reading
Predicting litigation responsibility for 2008
The big changes in litigation for 2008 both concern responsibility – the authority and knowledge of the person who gives the Disclosure Statement and the direct responsibility at boardroom level for the time and cost of heavy litigation. Both represent … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Litigation Support
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LDSI appoints Deborah Coram as UK MD
Legal Document Services International – LDSI – has appointed Deborah Coram as Managing Director of LDSI’s UK business operations. Deborah Coram has a legal background and practiced at two major Australian law firms. She was head of international business development … Continue reading
An articled clerk in Gray’s Inn in the 1970s
An old name used by a web searcher stirs memories of typewritten lists of documents of long ago. I keep a close eye on the web statistics from my web site and blog. They tell me, amongst other things, what … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, eDisclosure, Litigation Support
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Australia updates Federal Court ediscovery rules
New court rules for handling electronic documents are expected in Australia before the end of 2007. They will bite on as few as 500 documents, there will be a court-appointed expert to manage cases, and there is a massive investment … Continue reading
Commercial Court Long Trial Recommendations
The Report and Recommendations of the Commercial Court Long Trials Working Party was published on 6 December 2007. Its 83 pages deserve a closer look than time allows now, but we will have a quick summary of the passages relating … Continue reading
Posted in Commercial Court, Court Rules, Courts, CPR, eDisclosure, Litigation Support
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Litigation insurers have an interest in eDisclosure
My heading is not a report that litigation insurers have actually shown an interest in electronic disclosure. They clearly have an interest, though, in the sense that their interests must lie in anything which has the potential to bring parties … Continue reading
Posted in Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Litigation Support
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Victor Limongelli now CEO of Guidance Software
Guidance Software announced last week that Victor Limongelli has been appointed Chief Executive Officer. I met Victor at a conference in London earlier this year. He is easy to spot – an American executive who speaks knowledgeably about the English … Continue reading
First e-disclosure training for judges
I led an e-disclosure training session in Birmingham last week for a room-full of District Judges and Specialist Judges from Chancery and Mercantile Courts in Birmingham, Bristol, Manchester and Leeds. We covered the Practice Direction to Part 31 CPR, the … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, E-Discovery Suppliers, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, FoxData, LiST, Litigation Support
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T3 – Trial Tactics and Technology in London
A mock eDiscovery hearing yesterday in front of real judges would have put UK litigation lawyers on notice of rough rides ahead if they are less than fully prepared to justify what has been done or not done to control … Continue reading
Throw it over the wall Discovery
Both the legal and IT worlds have technical expressions and terms of art which tend to exclude outsiders. Litigation support and e-Disclosure have feet in both these camps and a reasonable share of terms which do not mean much to … Continue reading
US court rejects production of paper documents
The US Electronic Discovery Blog carries a story under the heading Court rejects paper production as inadequate and orders production in electronic format. The court had suggested that “whatever is electronically available.. be made available in electronic format”. The Defendants … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Litigation Support
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Richard Susskind and the End of Lawyers
Richard Susskind’s long-term prediction that the work of lawyers will break up into “identifiable and discrete pieces” applies here and now to electronic Disclosure. The discrete stages of first identifying and culling, and only then analysing, document populations do not … Continue reading
E-Discovery conference in London January 2008
Marcus Evans, the international conference organiser, asked me some time ago to be a speaker at their E-Discovery and Document Management Strategies Conference in London on 14 and 15 January 2008. The request coincided with the opportunity to organise e-Disclosure … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, Document Retention, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, FRCP, Litigation Support
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Useful pointer to US e-Discovery sources
The Information Governance Engagement Area has a link to a useful article which pulls together the key US sources on e-Discovery matters. The article, by Robert Ambrogi in Law Technology News, is called EDD Bytes to feed your firm’s knowledge … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, FRCP, Litigation Support
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Training for judges in e-Disclosure
“I have been asked to develop and deliver a training course for judges on the subject of e-disclosure. There are two broad headings – the nuts and bolts of the technology and the proactive use of the CPR to encourage … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, E-Discovery Suppliers, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, FoxData, LiST, Litigation Support
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Electronic evidence and e-discovery forum 2007
The skills and tools developed for urgent regulatory compliance and forensic analysis have benefits for cost-effective electronic Disclosure in litigation. I am just back from the Electronic Evidence and e-Discovery forum run by AKJ Associates, a two-day conference at which … Continue reading
Predicting the end of e-Discovery?
At first sight, a ruling made in Delaware last week appears to predict the end of e-Discovery. A closer reading reveals a terminological confusion and the common-sense conclusion that clients will find a different way of resolving their disputes if … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, FRCP, Litigation Support
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IT goes a lot faster than people for discovery
My heading comes from an article called The Data Explosion at Forbes.com (you need to sign up as a member, or more easily found here) about H5, the San Francisco company specialising in large-scale document analysis and the management of … Continue reading
US courts’ hard line on Discovery failures
The US courts are coming down heavily on inadequate Discovery of e-mail and other electronic sources of information, and accepting few excuses for non-compliance with the Rules. Events in a far away country of which we know little (as Chamberlain … Continue reading
Small PDFs and best OCR for eDiscovery
Use Abbyy FineReader to OCR .tiff images and save to .pdf and then use Adobe Acrobat 8 Professional to save in JBIG2 format. It sounds a long route but the results are smaller and better than anything else I have … Continue reading
Agree on Disclosure – or the judge will decide for you
If the parties fail to agree on the handling of electronic sources of information as required by the Practice Direction to Part 31 CPR, the judge might impose his own ideas on them. The result may please neither side. This … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, FRCP, LiST, Litigation Support
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E-Disclosure, Needles and Haystacks 3 – Keywords
This is the third article which looks at issues raised by Alex Charlton and Matthew Lavy in an article in the April / May 2007 edition of the SCL’s Computers & Law Magazine. The opening article is here. This section … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, H5, Litigation Support
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The Part 31 CPR obligation to discuss ESI
What were almost side-issues in Malletier v Dooney & Bourke, Inc are worth noting when considering the UK Part 31 CPR obligation to discuss ESI issues I have a double interest at the moment in the scope of the English … Continue reading
Too much EDD about EDD
…and too many ESIs about ESI. Those of us who watch the discovery and compliance industry have the same problem as the lawyers have with their clients’ documents – getting at the stuff which matters. I have started reading the … Continue reading
OutIndex hires Senior Application Architect
I wrote approvingly recently (OutIndex imports orators as well as Outlook) about OutIndex, whose applications allow users to bring in house the process of collecting, indexing and reviewing electronic files, whether mail messages from Outlook or Lotus Notes, or Word … Continue reading
Posted in eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Litigation Support
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TRILANTIC cited as a top eDiscovery provider
A coup for Nigel Murray and TRILANTIC as ILTA opens in Orlando. Trilantic was named as a Top 20 eDiscovery provider based on Law Firm recognition. In addition, they were cited as a Top 10 provider in the (trial) presentation … Continue reading
In Orlando, now that ILTA’s there
I pack my bag, and in it I put a Marriott hotel in Orlando, ILTA, the Practice Direction to Part 31 CPR, a document retention policy, a litigation support training course, an e-Disclosure conference, some needles and haystacks, All Souls … Continue reading
What can the CPR learn from the FRCP?
Reza Alexander of DLA Piper UK LLP is perhaps the most knowledgeable UK expert on the implications of the recent e-Disclosure amendments to the US court rules. I will point you in a moment to an article by him, but … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, eDisclosure, FRCP, LiST, Litigation Support
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OutIndex imports orators as well as Outlook
OutIndex, makers of low-cost software which imports and processes mail files and electronic documents, invited some top US e-Disclosure experts to speak at their Legal Technology Summit yesterday. English judges are showing increasing interest in using their CPR powers to … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, Courts, CPR, E-Discovery Suppliers, eDisclosure, FRCP, LiST, Litigation Support
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E-Disclosure, Needles and Haystacks 2 – volumes
This is one of a series of articles based on an account by barristers Alex Charlton and Matthew Lavy of a document-heavy case in which they were involved as the recipient of a large electronic Disclosure. Each article is free-standing … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, CPR, Document Retention, eDisclosure, Litigation Support
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E-Disclosure – Needles and Haystacks
The April / May 2007 edition of the SCL’s Computers & Law Magazine includes an article by barristers Alex Charlton and Matthew Lavy, who tell of their experiences on the receiving end of a very large, and apparently undiscriminating, e-Disclosure … Continue reading
Posted in Court Rules, CPR, Document Retention, eDisclosure, Litigation Support
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Anacomp buys CaseLogistix
Anacomp Inc, a large US provider of document and business process management solutions, has acquired CaseLogistix, the evidence and litigation management software company from Nashville, Tennessee.
Document Retention
I have posted a new series of articles on my web site at http://www.chrisdalelawyersupport.co.uk. Called The Pyramid of Preparedness, the articles look at three tiers of action which a business ought to consider, either as a potential risk – a … Continue reading
The e-Discovery of Document Retention
The IQPC Conference on Information Retention and E-Disclosure Management, London 22 and 23 May 2007 A load of self-imposed rules and habits were cast aside this week. I usually sit at my desk until the early hours, and dawn is … Continue reading
LiST’s Data Exchange Protocol – Disclosure Data
“Part 2 of LiST’s Data Exchange Protocol says that adherence to the Protocol “may require a party to enlist the expertise of an external consultant”. That is what I do, and is both my reason for writing about this area … Continue reading
Posted in eDisclosure, LiST, Litigation Support
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E-Disclosure Costs Debate
The second article in my series on electronic Disclosure has been published on the web site of the Society for Computers & Law at http://www.scl.org under the title E-Disclosure in Practice. The bulk of it describes the process by which … Continue reading
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LegalTech New York 2007
I am just back from New York where the members of the UK litigation support industry migrate en masse at the end of every January to mingle with each other and their American cousins. It was great fun, from the … Continue reading
Posted in eDisclosure, LegalTech, Litigation Support
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SCL Call to Suppliers
My article Uncovering the Mysteries of Disclosure is published on the web site of Computers & Law, the magazine of the Society for Computers & Law. It can be found here The article was written in response to the suggestion … Continue reading
Off to LegalTech in New York
Normal service will be interrupted for a few days whilst I go to New York for LegalTech. The reference to “a few days” means that although I know I am leaving on Saturday, I am not very clear about the … Continue reading
Posted in eDisclosure, LegalTech, Litigation Support
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Litigation Service Providers
“A big litigation services provider will handle every aspect of Disclosure for you and you can outsource the whole process, from first instructions, through Disclosure and exchange, to issue analysis and on to trial presentation, using their resources instead of … Continue reading
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SCL article now public
My article Uncovering the Mysteries of Disclosure, written for Computers & Law, the magazine of the Society for Computers & Law, has now been made accessible to all on the SCL web site. It can be found here. The theme … Continue reading
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Choosing Litigation Software
“Although there is inevitably much commonality between products, there are also differences. There are major differences of principle, minute differences of user interface, and a host of points of middling importance – middling, that is, until you need what suddenly … Continue reading
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Metadata in e-Disclosure
“When the experts start chattering at each other in dog Greek, you know they want to exclude you. Metadata means “information about data” and generally has three sub-classes – descriptive metadata (generally appearing on its face, such as its date), … Continue reading
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Documents, Disclosure Data and Metadata
“You might also, I suppose, think back to the good old days when a “document” was one or more pieces of paper filed with others in a ring binder, when the “data” about them was a typed list of documents … Continue reading
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How wide is your Disclosure search?
“This might give the undiscerning reader the impression that such devices and documents are immune from the “reasonable and proportionate search” which the Disclosure Statement relates to. It does not. Indeed, the very recital (the detail of which may surprise … Continue reading
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