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Entries tagged as ‘Electronic Discovery’

April 9, 2009 CLE on “Searching through e-Discovery”

April 14, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Greg Buckles and I had a great CLE webinar on April 9, 2009 for the State Bar of Texas Paralegal Division.  This was PD’s first CLE webinar for paralegals.  I have been serving as the District CLE Chair for the Paralegal Division of the State Bar of Texas this past year.  I have been looking forward to presenting a CLE Webinar to the members of the Texas State Bar Paralegal Division before my term ends in June 2009, and I was delighted that 168 Texas Paralegal members attended throughout the State. 

I asked Greg Buckles, a forensic and electronic discovery expert in Houston, to co-present the CLE with me, and fortunately for us, Greg agreed, and he gave us a fantastic presentation.  Greg spent most of last year serving on the new EDRM Search Metric Committee, and so he was able to bring us some valuable information from the EDRM Search Metric that paralegals can use to search through electronic discovery. 

What I learned in preparing for the CLE is that our courts are weighing heavily on the side of demanding accountability from the users who conduct searches of electronic discovery.  There is even a decision from the Southern District of Texas indicating that sanctions will be handed out in the future if firms continue to negligently entrust searching electronic discovery to untrained attorneys or paralegals — or litigation support personnel for that matter. 

For myself, I believe search will be THE hot issue for the coming decade.  Therefore, I was grateful for the opportunity to present an introduction of this important issue to the Texas paralegal community.  Paralegals everywhere can certainly add search techniques to their skill sets.  After all, paralegals work with evidence every day as well as working closely with their attorneys and clients. 

I hope that we inspired a few paralegals to go forward in their careers with this training in search methodology and best practices.  AIIM.org has a certification module on Information Organization, Access & Search that is well worth the time and effort.  AIIM also offers this certification program as an internet module, and their classroom session will be coming to Houston later in 2009, which I plan to attend and become certified in search.  But everyone can study search on the EDRM.net website as well as through other resources available on the internet.  I think ALSP is looking into offering a search certification as well, but I’m not sure about that.  It would be good if they would bring this to the litigation support community.

Being able to conduct proper search techniques is something that can be taught, and both paralegals and litigation support personnel can certainly achieve a core competency of utilizing legally defensible best practices when searching through electronic discovery.

Julie Wade
April 14, 2009

p.s.  A copy of the powerpoint slide can be obtained at http://www.reason-ed.com/Reason-eD/?CFID=19016163&CFTOKEN=53761687 or on my Linked-In page http://www.linkedin.com/in/juliewade

Categories: Electronic Discovery · Litigation Support
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Introducing the new ezPriv

March 11, 2009 · Leave a Comment

IN2ITIVE TECHNOLOGIES ANNOUNCES THE PUBLIC RELEASE OF ezPRIV

The only technology that allows for the automation of multiple-entry privilege logs for emails.

 

ezPriv was designed and developed for the purpose of automating the process of creating privilege logs for use during the review process in electronic discovery document productions.  Automating the generation of privilege logs from the litigation support database will save countless hours in building the privilege logs and will mitigate the substantial risks of waiving privilege that have occurred recently in a number of cases.

 

ezPriv will accept as input a directory of OCR/extracted text files or a delimited text file containing the OCR/Extracted Text of your tagged privileged documents from the review database. The user can then generate a line by line privilege log, individually listing all pertinent information to the privileged communication together with their family attachment(s), if any, and the bates number ranges associated with those records. 

 

ezPriv is revolutionary.  It is the first utility of its kind to aid the review team by automating the privilege log process in a manner consistent with the Rules of Procedure and that the Courts are now requiring, i.e., separately logging all the senders and recipients to emails claimed as a privileged communication together with their family attachments.  This again, is an arduous task for the paralegal or litigation support department given the short amount of time given for the privilege review and the enormous quantities of emails that are often involved with electronic discovery productions today.

 

In2itive Technologies is offering a free 7 day fully functional version for download from their website. Please visit  www.In2itiveTechnologies.com for additional information and a very informative whitepaper on the subject.

 

# # #

 

In2itive Technologies provides professional and innovative legal technology solutions to the Computer Forensic and Electronic Discovery communities.

 

Contact: 

Julie Wade                                                                                                    

Marketing Consultant

In2itive Technologies, LLC

1020 SW Taylor, Suite 380

Portland, OR 97205  

Julie.Wade@in2itivetechnologies.com

971.285.3408

Categories: Electronic Discovery
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Rule 26(g) Certifications

February 23, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Okay, nothing is more aggravating than being locked out of something. Especially when you want to review a white paper.  This is because I’m a Yahoo! email werkingurl, and someone with a bona-fide corporate email account address will need to download the Fios whitepaper on Rule 26(g) certifications and forward it to me, please.

Categories: Electronic Discovery
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Native Reviews, Document Productions & Enterprise Content Management: Cost Effective Approaches to e-Discovery

February 13, 2009 · 2 Comments

The whole world is in economic turmoil, perhaps the worst global depression ever recorded. Tens of thousands of legal jobs have recently been lost. We will start seeing an onslaught of litigation because of all the money lost, the contracts that went south, and from lawsuits brought by all the workers who were are laid off as a direct result of the securitization meltdown of our financial system. Many of these lawsuits will be brought by thousands of Defined Benefit Plans and other state and municipal governmental agencies who were sold junk derivatives and collateralized debt obligations derived from the subprime-credit rating agency fiasco. A bona-fide lawsuit feeding frenzy is on the horizon. The courts are going to be the only remedy for all of these financial participants because you cannot dump these toxic assets from your balance sheets (even by filing bankruptcy to shed it because the holders of these securities contracts can go after whatever liquid financial instruments that remain in your portfolio[1]). Lawsuits are going to be the only option for many involved.

For these reasons, everyone is going to be hard-pressed to reign-in the costs of litigation more than ever before. And electronic discovery (“e-Discovery”) is one of the most expensive cost components to the parties in litigation today. KPMG estimates that first level document review encompasses anywhere between 58% and 90% of the total litigation costs. (See “Cutting to the Document Review Chase,” American Bar Association Newsletter, Business Law Today, Vol. 18, No. 2, Nov.-Dec. 2008).

But it doesn’t have to be this expensive, and it shouldn’t be. Litigants are asking their counsel to investigate the feasibility of incorporating their own enterprise content management (ECM) solutions with their e-Discovery obligations during litigations. This essentially is called native document reviews and productions.

Why are we processing ESI anyway?

To understand how using my client’s ECM solutions will lower e-Discovery costs, let’s look at the why’s and wherefore’s of collecting electronically stored information (ESI) for review. We will then examine what happens to that data under the current EDRM model. And we will close our review by looking at how utilizing an ECM system to facilitate both native document reviews and native document productions can be achieved in a secured environment and will reduce a significant portion of the out-of-pocket costs associated with e-Discovery.

There is nothing more ubiquitous than electronic files. Massive quantities, terabytes and petabytes, of ESI are being collected for the review process. It is a large and costly proposition.

A document review can either be conducted by reviewing the native documents themselves through internet hosted environments or with stand alone document review software applications. Otherwise, all the data that is collected will be “processed” for loading into a review software or database for the document review. The client incurs significant costs during this processing of their data.

Processing involves taking structured native data (Word documents, emails, spreadsheets) and all the unstructured content (faxes and other paper documents that have been digitized), and extracts the data, metadata and properties and reproduces it as separate image and text files that can be loaded into a litigation support database. These databases are used for their ability to assign bates numbering and a certain amount of foldering and tagging functionality for review purposes. However, the litigation support databases were not designed originally to house massive amounts of electronic files. Enterprise class modifications are being incorporated that improves their functionality. However, they can become very slow and cumbersome to navigate, tag and sort through with large datasets loaded, and there are other search restrictions that may make the databases unfeasible. You are also limited to conducting straight Boolean, proximity and nested searches.  The  review software that processes the data allows you to use clustering analysis technology, but this technology is available elsewhere that does not require the data to be processed.

The “processing” method fails because you are essentially stripping the native file of its properties.  Who can look you at you straight-faced and tell you that is a best practices model?  Using OCR to recreate data and metadata after extraction has high documented error rates of up to 50% during document reviews. (See id: “Cutting to the Document Review Chase,” American Bar Association Newsletter, Business Law Today, Vol. 18, No. 2, Nov.-Dec. 2008). And it is expensive. Processing costs range on average between $1,000 to $1,700 per gigabyte.

Because our courts are mandating that we demonstrate both a legally defensible and repeatable methodology for producing e-Discovery, at the very least, I recommend considering all the native review tools that are available today in the market that will facilitate first pass document reviews.  For instance, there is a relatively new indexing tool that is being ignored, Microsoft’s Indexing Server, the Search Server Express 2008, that provides enterprise-class search and indexing capabilities for free.  If you were to migrate data to the MSIDXS and crawl the data, you would have a much more reliable search experience that searches across Exchange platforms and supports Lotus Notes.  The MSIDXS supports the SQL query language which is well known and makes it very easy to use the Indexing Server.  The MSIDXS will index all data from the files, folders and web sites.

The entire section of the EDRM model on processing a document collection needs to be rexamined.  It is a wasteful use of resources and produces inaccurate results.  Any system that demonstrates error rates of up to 50% in the review process must be rexamined.

Being able to migrate data from an existing ECM system into a review platform that allows a litigant to reduce its overall out-of-pocket costs associated with the document review and production is a system that should be looked into. Through adoption of ECM platforms, MSIDX, SharePoint, or other hosted cloud repositories or extranets for the productions, will bring document productions into the 21st Century.

Recommendation for Native Reviews

I recommend native reviews that do not process data for the simple reasons of cost and defensibility. If the content is already structured, it can and should be indexed.  We need to use the myriad of software applications and utilities available to facilitate culling down the amount of e-Discovery required for the document reviews and productions in a constructive way, on data that has not been comprimised through the OCR process. The technologies are quite promising. We now have options for robust review tools that offer clustering analysis and data mining, and provide for efficient high level filtering and foldering of data.

ECM provides a controlled data environment. Autonomy has just released a repository for SharePoint that looks promising, and Kroll has introduced a brand new review platform that is used specifically in conjunction with SharePoint. There is no doubt that using ECM with e-Discovery will reduce the overall out-of-pocket costs of litigations today.  But we need these tools to be able to migrate the original data without processing it.

The Answers

What are the answers? No two document productions are going to be alike. And all litigations may not require a full blown ECM solution or analytical review tool when the case circumstances would allow for a simple swap of a CD Rom to suffice. But, understand, the courts clearly want cooperation between the parties today during the discovery process. Mancia v. Mayflower Textile Services Co., 253 F.R.D. 354 (D. Md. 2008). So, I am using this downtime to familiarize myself with the various document review tools and production platforms available. I’m exploring the cloud solutions. If I can recommend incorporating my client’s ECM platform with a document review or production, I will. You might find I have a very happy client who was able to save a substantial amount of money in their discovery costs.

Julie Wade is a Litigation Support Analyst/PM Consultant in Houston, Texas. You can email Julie at acedparalegal@yahoo.com.


[1] See Sections 555 (securities contracts), 556 (commodity or forward contracts), 559 (repurchase agreements) and 560 (swap agreements) of the Bankruptcy Code.

Categories: Concordance · Electronic Discovery · Enterprise 2.0 · SharePoint · Summation
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A Paralegal’s Role in Electronic Discovery

July 16, 2008 · 2 Comments

Tomorrow, I give a presentation to the Houston Chapter of Women in eDiscovery on the Paralegal’s Role in Electronic Discovery.  Hopefully I can convey the collaborative effort betwen paralegals and litigation support and IT in this endeavor.  I am looking forward to the presentation.  If I can figure out who to post the powerpoint I will.  If I’m not able to, you can check out the Women in eDiscovery website in a few weeks and check it out.

Categories: Electronic Discovery
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Geeze whiz…..

July 5, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I’ve had this site up for less than a week, and I’ve already had to thwart a spam attack! Someone tried to paste my article on Summation into the Database Manager’s Association blog site. Ha-ha!

Categories: Electronic Discovery
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Beyond Enterprise 2.0

July 5, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Okay, today I’d like to help you cross the bridge, to borrow an overtired analogy, so that you might see my point on why we need to jump to the next generation of technologies for reviewing and producing electronic documents for use in civil litigations. The Enterprise has caught onto application gadgets and KM workers’ click click right there next to their sports scores icons or iTunes or Flickr or Facebook shortcuts on their personalized dashboards, and receive the updated work-related info and click click, back it goes in a keystroke, so within a few seconds the pesky little irritating work issue resolved itself and KM worker is back playing games . Am I jealous? Well I wasn’t so spoiled when I was their age. Ok, so we only had 1 game, Pong, back then when the typewriters roamed the earth, but whatever. You can’t discover mashups in Summation and Concordance. You need today’s tech to discover what’s really going on at the Enterprise 2.0.

Categories: Concordance · Electronic Discovery · Enterprise 2.0 · Summation
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Got SharePoint?

June 29, 2008 · 2 Comments

 

 

I

just want to jump up and down and throw my arms around in the air and turn blue in the face and scream until somebody asks what is causing all this ruckus! Then I can stop and smile and say, why gee Bill, there’s a product finally come out of Redmond that will change my life for the better, and I want you to get it for me. I’m talking about the Microsoft SharePoint Server 2007. SharePoint is the ultimate indexing document management tool that’s end use is perfect for Web 2.0 collaborations.  If you don’t know what the heck that means, know this:  AmLaw 100 is well aware of the potential uses of Sharepoint in the law firm.  It can be used for everything from conflicts management, to document management, to house deposition banks, to manage a case docket and calendar, to the end product of housing document productions. SharePoint is “this little engine that could.” 

SharePoint “portals” are completely secure internal Web sites with a central document libraries for accessing shared workspaces and documents, as well as housing specialized applications such as discussion boards, calendars, task lists, alerts, surveys and much more. 

A Microsoft SharePoint portal streamlines your communications process and helps you collaborate on documents by providing a secure place to house large document collections, collaboratively edit any specific documents you are working on with team members, clients and experts, and allows you to replace long strings of email conversations about relevant documents and the whatnot with an efficient use of the discussion board feature of the site. 

 

Other nifty applications that can be used on SharePoint sites are your case calendars and task lists. The bottom line is that you can create just about anything you want to on a SharePoint site.  Because you have 100% control over the access and privileges to the information housed on the internal Web sites, virtually all information is effortlessly managed and shared with the people who need to have access to it.

 

EMC Corporation has created SharePoint applications that allows you to search across platforms and servers, house relevant files and lock them down so you can view the files, but you cannot save over them, or move them away from the site.  This means there won’t ever be lost emails or privileged information leaking out. 

 

Microsoft just released its Search Server 2008, which is an Enterprise search platform based on the search capabilities of the Microsoft Office SharePoint Server. It provides you with the ability to search metadata attached to email and documents as well.  There is a free version available from Microsoft, the Microsoft Search Server Express 2008, that contains all of the same features as the commercial Enterprise edition, but on a stand-alone basis.  I can think of many law firms that could use a free indexing search tool and encourage you to check it out!

 

Categories: Electronic Discovery · SharePoint
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Summation’s demise?

June 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I guess you would have to say that this blog concerns litigation support and my single emphasis of getting rid of Summation by the year 2010 in the law firm setting.  I’d like to just get rid of it right now if I could.  (The same things goes for Concordance for all you out there using that.)  I mean, why are we doing this to ourselves?  We hate using these awful databases.  They suck.  Nobody likes using them.  But we go ahead and deploy these useless no-good programs anyway on a daily basis that cost our clients plenty of $$$, and from what I can tell from my 20 years worth of experience, for no-good reason that I can think except to keep the economy going?  I mean KA-Ching.  This sh*t is expensive.  I hate to think this, but who else is benefitting from useless garbage databases except the vendors who are making out like bankers?  Hum, who are these vendors who have pathed themselves in a little niche with one little word, “processing,” in the EDRM metrics?  Hum….  Well, I think we should replace this one little word, “processing,” altogether; scrap it in the scrapheap database junkyard where it belongs, and get ourselves around to better words, such as “indexing,” and “migrating,” and “universal viewer,”  where we should have been throwing our clients’ money around since 2000 at least when Microsoft created the first indexing server.  Duh.  So, this is the topic of my blog. No, not the rantings of a lunatic indentured servant who works for a law firm!  But, better “death to the database.”  That’s it.  So, come along into the world of data manipulation, what tools are cool, and how can we start focusing on solutions to make our lives better.   And I need your help.  I wish I had $300,000 for a contest, but I don’t.  I’m just a Werkin Gurl like you.  But I would like a few developers to pay attention, wrap a viewer around a search string or two and give me a line to code.  I’m not asking for too much. 

Categories: Electronic Discovery · Useless Database
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Best file renamers

June 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

What is the best file namer utility you’ve found?  My favorite is http://www.bulkrenameutility.co.uh/Main_Intro.php.  I can’t tell you how many times during the day that I’m using this great tool!  If I didn’t have to be shoving stuff into a database, I wouldn’t be renaming files!  But I am, and this one is good.

Categories: Utilities
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