E-Discovery

Texas Court: Don’t Mess With Metadata

A federal court in Dallas issued an adverse inference order and imposed $27,500 in sanctions against an attorney who “created a new profile” on a computer in order to…

Have We Learned Nothing About Emails?

The incriminating emails exchanged by Dewey & LeBoeuf attorneys since charged with larceny and securities fraud are just the latest examples of the fact that even smart and powerful people have not yet learned one of the basic tenets of eDiscovery: What you email can, and will, be used against you.

What E-Mail Overload Says About Information Governance

An old email account with 24,500 unread emails becomes the subject of a telling experiment.

Too Much Data, Too Little Support

Like their private sector counterparts, federal agencies are wrestling with the challenges of e-discovery, and in some respects they are […]

Too Much Data, Too Little Support

Federal agencies remain uneasy about their ability to manage e-discovery and electronic data, according to Deloitte’s “Seventh Annual Benchmarking Study […]

February Wrap-Up Of Notable E-Discovery Cases

Recent state court rulings in the rapidly evolving field of e-discovery. Among them: the denial of a request for disclosure […]

Prepare in Advance for Litigation Holds

If litigation is like bad weather, the time to prepare for a litigation hold is when the skies are clear, […]

The TGC E-Discovery Survey

Slow to confront the social media conundrum; slow to adopt predictive coding…

Prepare Far in Advance for Litigation Holds

A legal hold is a protocol that preserves evidence likely to be responsive in litigation. The process is part of […]

The E-Discovery Vs. Privacy Law Dilemma In The Asia-Pacific

Conflicts have emerged between what U.S. discovery laws require and blocking statutes and data privacy laws in the countries of […]

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