Historical eDJ Group essays from 2008-2018 have been migrated from the formal eDiscovery analyst site. Formatting, links and embedded images may be lost or corrupted in the migration. The legal technology market and practice has evolved rapidly and all historical content by eDJ analysts and guest authors were based on best knowledge when written and peer reviewed. This older content has been preserved for context and cannot be quoted or otherwise cited without written permission.
“P” is for Processing: Part 1
Migrated from eDJGroupInc.com. Author: Chuck Rothman. Published: 2012-04-04 09:00:46 Although Processing is smack dab in the middle of the EDRM, little real consideration is paid to it. When going through the various EDRM steps, processing does play a role, but to most practitioners, processing is equivalent to a cost item on the e-discovery budget sheet, and little more. If you know the volume of [...]
Mobile Discovery – Are You Ready For It?
A good friend shared an interesting story over the weekend about how the Michigan State Police routinely collect forensic snapshots of mobile phones during traffic stops. Apparently the American Civil Liberties Association (ACLU) is investigating the MSP’s use of the CelleBrite UFED kit during minor traffic stops without a warrant. At first, this seems outside the arena of civil electronic discovery. However, the story headline claims that the CelleBrite UFED only takes 2 minutes to image a mobile phone. The fact that they are being used by a state patrol officer during a traffic stop certainly backs up this time frame, but I could not find any performance information on the CelleBrite site. I see the new generation of mobile forensic technologies breaking down corporate ‘unduly burdensome’ arguments that have managed to exclude these devices from the discovery scope of many/most cases. After all, a plaintiff can now point to this article and ask, “Why can’t you use a similar device to preserve all custodian phones during your initial interviews?” Widespread use by non-geeks on roadside traffic stops certainly makes that a tough argument to fight.
Information Governance Percolating In Companies
I had the opportunity to attend eDJ’s Peer Group meetings last week, where the topic of discussion was information governance (IG). The Peer Group meetings are fascinating because real IG practitioners speak up about very real issues. I was struck by how daunting the challenge of truly governing information is. As electronic data grows exponentially, managing the risk that information poses is harder and harder. For every effort a company takes to safeguard information, employees create a workaround if that effort impinges on the velocity of information. In turn, those workarounds lead to a vicious circle of eDiscovery nightmares.
“P” is for Processing: Part 2
Migrated from eDJGroupInc.com. Author: Chuck Rothman. Published: 2012-04-11 09:00:36 E-Discovery processing involves much more than just multiplying the number of gigabyte by the per-gig rate. In the first part of this series, we looked at what processing does under the hood, and how to ensure that duplicate records are properly identified. This part continues the discussion.Emails and AttachmentsWhen the email is extracted from its [...]
Legacy Data and Data Remediation: What is the ROI? Part Two of an Inteview with Jonathan Wilan with Hunton & Williams
Migrated from eDJGroupInc.com. Author: Amber Scorah. Published: 2012-04-12 09:00:15 PART TWO OF INTERVIEW WITH JONATHAN WILANPartner at Hunton & Williams LLP With the exploding rate of data growth, data remediation is a serious exercise that all companies must consider.In part one of this series, I spoke with Jonathan Wilan, Partner at Hunton & Williams LLP, about the risks of not having a data remediation [...]
eDiscoveryJournal Expands with New Contributors
Migrated from eDJGroupInc.com. Author: . Published: 2012-04-13 16:58:27 The eDiscoveryJournal team is excited about our expanded coverage of the eDiscovery and Information Governance areas. The feedback from our readers has been extremely positive about our posts and articles, and we are determined to continue providing quality content. We are excited to announce the addition of three new contributors to the eDiscoveryJournal site.Brian Flatley is [...]
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