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Simon Says – Once, Twice, Three Times a Spoliator: eDiscovery Case Law

eDiscovery Daily

Despite that, as the opinion noted, Schulton had previously acknowledged that he used a “mechanism called Take Out” to export his entire ScholarChip e-mail account, which included all of its contents dating back to 2014, to Schulton’s personal “One Drive” cloud storage account. Judge’s Ruling.

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Will Lawyers Ever Embrace Technology?: eDiscovery Best Practices, Part Three

eDiscovery Daily

He has also been a great addition to our webinar program, participating with me on several recent webinars. which requires every discovery disclosure, request, response or objection be signed by an attorney of record. In Judge Grimm’s opinion, he calls Rule 26(g) is “the least understood or followed of the discovery rules.”

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eDiscovery for the Rest of Us: eDiscovery Best Practices, Part Three

eDiscovery Daily

He has also been a great addition to our webinar program, participating with me on several recent webinars. The Ernie Challenge posited a case with roughly 1 terabyte of data to collect and a final amount of 200 gigabytes of data to review, most of that e-mail with the balance being various types of financial data.

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Tom O’Connor of the Gulf Coast Legal Technology Center: eDiscovery Trends 2018

eDiscovery Daily

Well, as you can see, I have the word cloud you published in your blog about the most commonly used terms in the conference agenda. As illustrated in the word cloud, GDPR is certainly one of those important trends. They understand that there’s some computer technology in play. What does that mean? It’s fun.

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