|
|
|||||
| Home Page |
|||||
|
Mr. Li is a Litigation Support and E-Discovery trainer and consultant with over a decade of experience. He is the owner of APLCS, LLC (http://www.aplcs.com) and can be reached at requests@aplcs.com
Sort By: Date | Popularity
Electronic Discovery: Basic FrameworkAlthough the details of each E-Discovery effort will vary from case to case, there are certain similarities that exists between them. Basic data formats have evolved over the past few years into de facto standards used for the collection, review, and production of electronic documents. The steps taken to ensure quality are also generally applicable to most cases. Proper handling of ESI processing should begin with the following basic framework. Electronic Evidence & Information GluttonyIn this current age of the "Information Superhighway," companies literally "do not know what they know." And for attorneys who must review this avalanche of information (often from multiple sources) to ferret out "smoking guns" for a trial, this problem of information overload is much more compounded. The Ratio of Electronic Files to Paper in E-discoveryAttorneys and paralegals (and really any professional working in the legal field) have always worked in the realm of paper and file folders. Their work-habits and thought processes have been tuned with the tangible, and therefore have a strong need to convert the ethereal bits & bytes of technology into sheets of clean paper. The Human Factor of Electronic DiscoveryThe rapid invasion of technology within the corporate world has forced a steady (and speedy) change to the legal landscape. That E-Discovery is now a part of an attorney’s life and requires focus is no longer resisted (and certainly, can no longer be ignored). E-Discovery is here to stay, that will not change – what has to change (and should change) over the years is our approach.
|
|||||
|
Article Categories
|
|
||||