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Recent Posts
- 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
- Interview: John Tinsley of Iconic talks about machine translation and eDiscovery
- A roundup from my desk when we should all be in New York for Legalweek
- Supreme Court refuses permission to appeal on emailed attachments and privilege
- Some turn-of-the-year eDiscovery and eDisclosure updates
- Relativity acquires VerQu to capture communication data
- Relativity in Australia – investment, new functionality, and support for racial justice
- 12 Days of eDiscovery sung in memory of Gayle O’Connor
- An eDiscovery and eDisclosure round-up post with some compliance thoughts on Boris Johnson
- More updates on proposed changes to the Disclosure Pilot
About this site
Category Archives: Electronic courts
The growing need for barristers to become data-aware
An article on the Legal Futures site is headed Barristers becoming as vulnerable to cyber attacks as solicitors. Its opening picks up a warning from the Bar Standards Board reporting that solicitors had already fallen victim to IT threats and … Continue reading
LawFest 2018 on 8 March in New Zealand and the NZ steps towards electronic courts
To my regret, I have never made it to LawFest, the legal technology and innovation conference founded in New Zealand by Andrew King of eDiscovery Consulting. With five successful events under his belt, Andrew King can claim to be the … Continue reading
Posted in Discovery, eDisclosure, eDiscovery, Electronic courts, Electronic disclosure, New Zealand
Tagged Andrew King, David Harvey
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