News Sign

Shared Links (weekly) Mar. 12, 2023

Similar Posts

  • What I am Sharing (weekly) Sept. 20, 2020

    Five Strategies Building Relationships Remotely

    Software Updates and Why They’re Important

    Legal advice is often unaffordable. Here’s how more people can get help

    This security awareness training email is actually a phishing scam

    “A creative phishing campaign uses an email template that pretends to be a reminder to complete security awareness training from a well-known security company.”

    No Internal Investigation Is Complete Without ESI

    Observations from the Annual ILTA Conference:

    Ransomware Increases by 715% in First Half of 2020

    E-Discovery Platform RelativityOne Gets Its Next-Generation Interface, Aero UI

    Internet Access Has Never Been More Important — and Unequal

    What is mental health first aid? Why every workplace should offer it

    5 TED Talks That Will Make You Better at Remote Work

  • | |

    Linked: Dancing with tools

    The implications of what Seth has to say about tools like Google Sheets when it comes to eDiscovery technology are pretty obvious to me. “If you get good at a type of technology, you’ll find yourself using it often. On the other hand, if you decide that you’re somehow untalented at it (which is nonsense)…

  • |

    Linked: Covid-19 Explodes the Myth That Women ‘Opt’ Out of the Workforce

    I’m a man with no children. So, working extra hours when the need arises isn’t really an issue. (It’s a mental health and work/life balance issue when it never ends, but when that happens I can choose to go do something else, and we’ve made some progress in recognizing this in many workplaces.) On the other hand, I know, pretty instinctively, that if I put a hard 40 hour limit, or a hard ending of my day at a certain time, no matter what, I’d probably be out of a job. Yet, for people with children, there needs to be a hard cap on the hours spent working. The pandemic creating this home/virtual school issue made this worse, and more obvious, but it’s always been an issue. Lots of workplaces talk a good game about balance and flexibility, but when push comes to shove, most of them will also demand that you figure out your childcare issues on your own time and be available to work in a pinch. So, you login from home all evening and work, and if you’re a single parent, the kids get ignored, or maybe you can find someone else to watch them for you. If there are two parents, you’d better hope you both don’t have those kinds of jobs, because one of you needs to be available for childcare, you can’t both be online working all night. 

    And, if you have to choose which one leaves that kind of work arrangement, well, in general, women get paid less and have less advancement opportunities, (partially because they are more likely to “opt-out”), so they are going to be the ones to opt out, perpetuating the impression that women make these choices, that are then used to justify not changing the workplace to accommodate working mothers. After all, they’re likely to leave anyway, right? 

    It’s really quite the little, vicious, circle we’ve made for women in the workplace. 

  • Those Pesky Email Signatures

    Spotted a mention over on eDiscovery Daily about an Above the Law article wherein they take a good look at all of the wasted space taken up by the millions of emails by adding a signature file, specifically the “please consider the environment” line. In essence, adding that extra text probably uses more energy to…

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)