- published: 24 Feb 2014
- views: 18283
Electronic discovery (or e-discovery or ediscovery) refers to discovery in litigation or government investigations which deals with the exchange of information in electronic format (often referred to as electronically stored information or ESI). These data are subject to local rules and agreed-upon processes, and are often reviewed for privilege and relevance before being turned over to opposing counsel.
Data are identified as potentially relevant by attorneys and placed on legal hold. Evidence is then extracted and analyzed using digital forensic procedures, and is reviewed using a document review platform. Documents can be reviewed either as native files or after a conversion to PDF or TIFF form. A document review platform is useful for its ability to aggregate and search large quantities of ESI.
Electronic information is considered different from paper information because of its intangible form, volume, transience and persistence. Electronic information is usually accompanied by metadata that is not found in paper documents and that can play an important part as evidence (for example the date and time a document was written could be useful in a copyright case). The preservation of metadata from electronic documents creates special challenges to prevent spoliation. In the United States, electronic discovery was the subject of amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP), effective December 1, 2006, as amended to December 1, 2010. In addition, state law now frequently also addresses issues relating to electronic discovery. Other jurisdictions around the world also have rules relating to electronic discovery, including Part 31 of the Civil Procedure Rules in England and Wales.
Office 365 is the brand name used by Microsoft for a group of software plus services subscriptions that provides productivity software and related services to its subscribers. For consumers, the service allows the use of Microsoft Office apps on Windows and OS X, provides storage space on Microsoft's cloud storage service OneDrive, and grants 60 Skype minutes per month. For business and enterprise users, Office 365 offers plans including e-mail and social networking services through hosted versions of Exchange Server, Skype for Business Server, SharePoint and Office Online, integration with Yammer, as well as access to the Office software.
After a beta test that began in October 2010, Office 365 was launched on June 28, 2011, as a successor to Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite (MSBPOS), originally aimed at corporate users. With the release of Microsoft Office 2013, Office 365 was expanded to include new plans aimed at different types of businesses, along with new plans aimed at general consumers wanting to use the Office desktop software on a subscription basis—with an emphasis on the rolling release model.
10 years may refer to:
Vital information about the E-Discovery process explained in basic terms that everyone can understand. For more information go to: http://www.gvsu.edu/arbitrations/
Joshua Gilliland eDiscovery attorney and blogger for @bowtielaw and @thelegalgeeks provides an overview of eDiscovery, including defining electronically stored information under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the California eDiscovery Act, discusses the form of production, initial disclosures, the different types of metadata, extracted text and OCR, and document review. No part of this recording should be considered legal advice.
Big Data can be a big legal problem for companies. Every time a company faces a lawsuit they have to dig through Big Data to find what is relevant to the case. Learn how this inefficient process is transformed www.ediscovery.com.
The time it takes and costs involved with reviewing e-Discovery documents can be daunting. This demo bench features the new Office 365 Advanced eDiscovery (formerly Equivio Analytics) capability in Office 365 E5. This uses advanced text analytics and predictive coding to perform multi-dimensional analyses of data collections to save you time and money. Watch as lead engineer Kamal Janardhan, walks through how Office 365 Advanced eDiscovery works to identify and filter data; including training Machine Learning to search for relevant documents so that you can quickly identify the relevant documents you need.
This unique E-Discovery Day webinar highlighted the progress of eDiscovery technologies during the last decade and looked forward through the lens of innovation into the next ten years of data discovery. This information-packed session included some of the world’s foremost authorities on eDiscovery who shared their thoughts, considerations and recommended best practices for the use of Technology-Assisted Review. (December 1, 2016)
http://www.nuix.com | Are you seeking to improve speed, reduce costs and increase quality in your eDiscovery process? That’s Nuix’s goal. Combining Nuix 5.2, with the Nuix Director and Nuix Web Review & Analytics, you will have access to a wealth of new features and performance improvements. But not everyone knows how to use these capabilities to their full potential. During this informative webinar, our experienced Nuix engineers Simon Bayangos and Matthew Geaghan will show you how Nuix’s new applications and capabilities form part of a complete eDiscovery workflow. You will also learn how to define and automate your workflow to minimize errors and make the hard work easier and avoid the drudgery and complexity of moving or exporting data with Nuix. To learn more about our eDiscovery so...
Legal Geek Joshua Gilliland, Esq., blogger for www.bowtielaw.com, discusses the form of production in eDiscovery. Josh reviews Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Rule 34 and one recent case. (No part of this video should be considered legal advice).
Learn more at PwC.com - http://www.pwc.com/forensic PwC's Digital Forensics and eDiscovery global network deploy resources quickly, identifying, preserving, collecting, and analysing data relevant to the challenges you face. © 2016 PwC. All rights reserved.