Best of NLJ 2012 Survey
Take a moment today and complete the BEST OF THE NATIONAL LAW JOURNAL reader’s rankings survey. The survey is open through the end of March, so there are only a couple of days
[Read More]Take a moment today and complete the BEST OF THE NATIONAL LAW JOURNAL reader’s rankings survey. The survey is open through the end of March, so there are only a couple of days
[Read More]More and more often, employees are required to engage in sponsored social media networks such as Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, and others, during the course of their work. This participation may be as
[Read More]In our previous post, we discussed why Judge Andrew Peck’s decision to endorse predictive coding in Da Silva Moore was a golden opportunity for the technology, although not without flaw. Today, we’re going
[Read More]Judge Andrew Peck’s endorsement of predictive coding, issued orally on February 8th and in writing February 24th, has been making waves for almost a month now, as everyone from expert analysts to Twitter
[Read More]As e-discovery gets bigger, the future of the review attorney shrinks. This equation makes perfect sense, and on the surface, it sounds quite grim for the attorneys in question. As the New York
[Read More]The Supreme Court of Florida considered amendments to the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure concerning E-Discovery last Wednesday, March 7th. For the most part, the amendments were in the mold of the Federal
[Read More]To quote the famous Spice Girls lyric, “I’ll tell you what I want, what I really, really want.” But what does a 1996 pop hit have to do with e-discovery? When it comes
[Read More]What happens when a document originally written over two hundred years ago collides headfirst with modern computing? Inevitably, confusion and conflict are the result. In the March 12th article, “When Does the Constitution
[Read More]The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas has introduced its own model order regarding patent e-discovery. While based on the Model Order developed by U.S. Court of Appeals for the
[Read More]In a landmark ruling from the United Kingdom’s High Court, legal claims can now be served via Facebook. Although this has happened before on rare occasions, typically when a defendant cannot be easily
[Read More]At LegalTECH New York last week there was an astonishing amount of sessions focused on Technology Assisted Review (TAR). The buzz around TAR continues to grow, but still few are using it. Most
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