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Sedona Principle 6 and the Duty to Evaluate
On eDiscovery Today, I engaged in a follow up discussion on my TAR series (published in two parts here and here and republished in one part here) with Dr. Jeremy Pickens, Principal Data Scientist at OpenText, who is friend and well-respected...
eDisclosure and the “Wagatha Christie” Case
This is a fun and interesting case covered by one of my all-time favorite bloggers, Chris Dale, on his excellent eDisclosure Information Project blog. Here is a brief summary of the case and the eDisclosure implications. Colleen...
Fitbit Evidence in True Crime Stories and the Occasional Civil Case
Last week, a true crime case that I’ve been covering for five years reached its conclusion (appeals aside) and I also just watched a TV show about another true crime case. The common link between...
An In-Depth Look at the 2022 eDisclosure Systems Buyers Guide, Part 2
After covering Andrew Haslam’s annual eDisclosure Systems Buyers Guide on eDiscovery Today last week (which was published last week on Rob Robinson’s ComplexDiscovery site here), I published part 1 of a more in-depth look at the guide and...
An In-Depth Look at the 2022 eDisclosure Systems Buyers Guide
Last week on eDiscovery Today, I covered Andrew Haslam’s annual eDisclosure Systems Buyers Guide, which was published last week on Rob Robinson’s ComplexDiscovery site here. As you can imagine, it’s difficult to cover a 450-page guide like that...
The Magnificent Seven, Part 2: More Blunt Observations from Judge Jeffrey Cole
Last time, I discussed one of our favorite judges to cover on the EDRM monthly case law webinar: Illinois Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Cole, who pulls no punches when it comes to how he views lack...