Protected: The Federal Government Turns to Litigation Software

July 5, 2012

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Protected: How One Judge Sees E-Discovery

July 4, 2012

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Protected: Predictive Coding is Changing Court Case Research

July 3, 2012

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Protected: FRE 702 and Predictive Coding

July 2, 2012

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Protected: Litigation Support Software Gets a Speedier Tool

June 29, 2012

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Protected: Predictive Coding Gets Patented

June 27, 2012

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Protected: The Human Nature of Predictive Coding

June 25, 2012

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A BreakDown of E-Discovery and Hackgate

June 25, 2012

The E-Discovery 2.0 blog recently reported on more scandals surrounding the Murdoch organization and how it plays into the history of E-Discovery crimes at large, in the article “The Demise of the News of the World: An Analysis of Hackgate Through and E-Discovery Lense.”

According to the report, there have been 60 civil claims brought to the UK that are derived from Hackgate, a monumental phone hacking scandal that unfolded in July of last year. These have resulted in the discovery of both conspiracy and the willful destruction of evidence in most cases.

The article states:

The News Corporation has both the U.S. and U.K. to contend with regarding the defensibility of their information management systems and potential sanctions. However, in either scenario, the intentional deletion of relevant evidence is an obstruction of justice (in a criminal sense). News Corporation is a prime example of a multinational corporation that is not only suffering from the repercussions of bad behavior, but one that could not mitigate these risks at the highest level due to poor information management.”

I completely agree with the author’s assertion, particularly in issues where legality is concerned. In order to protect your organization from legal attacks, proper content management is a must.

Jasmine Ashton, June 25, 2012

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Protected: Will Lawyers Become Obsolete?

June 22, 2012

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Protected: Serviant Webinar: Predictive Analysis

June 21, 2012

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