Should There be an Ethical Requirement to be Competent in eDiscovery?
From Robert Ambrogi Do Lawyers Have An Ethical Duty To Be Competent in E-Discovery? I don’t see why not!
From Robert Ambrogi Do Lawyers Have An Ethical Duty To Be Competent in E-Discovery? I don’t see why not!
Now, however, things will be different. I am in my final week working for Syntricate. The next time I update my LinkedIn profile, it will be for real. I will be the eDiscovery Training Manager for Nuix starting on December 15.
Well, in the case of the Seattle Public School District’s data breach, the culprit seems to be their outside law firm: “Late Tuesday night Seattle Public Schools learned that a law firm retained by the district to handle a complaint against the district inadvertently sent personally identifiable student information to an individual involved in the…
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…
I was not able to attend this years ILTA conference, but thanks to the power of Twitter, I was able to follow along in my own, small, way. No, it’s not the same as being there, but seeing some of the information being presented, and the ideas flowing around social media definitely gave me some…
Over the weekend Ralph posted a video on his blog, and had some rather strong opinions about what his firm is doing, and what firms should be doing in general. I no longer have to supervise a litigation support department. Instead I manage a relationship with a vendor. It is much more pleasant, believe me….