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Published byLee Anna Daniels Modified over 9 years ago
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Yesterday 1900’s Word Processing about 30 words per minute
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Yesterday 1900’s Copier about 4 pages per minute
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Yesterday 1960’s Selectric T/W correcting
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Yesterday 1982 IBM PC XT 5.25” diskettes 128K RAM 10Mb Hard Drive $5,545.00
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The Paperless Office
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Today Networking Everyone connected inside their office…outside their office Servers, hubs, nic cards, switches, printers, backup devices
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Electronic Discovery refers to the discovery of electronic documents and data…including e-mail, web pages, word processing files, computer databases, and virtually anything that is stored on a computer or electronic device.
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The Sedona Conference (www.thesedonaconference.org) Best Practices, Recommendations & Principles for Addressing Electronic Document Production(2004) The Sedona Principles
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eDiscovery Why is this important…because greater than 48% of all corporate communications never appear in paper format…and over 92% of all information is electronically created…estimated that within 2 years electronic evidence will replace paper as the primary source of discovery in commercial litigation.
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so after five years of discussion and public comment the proposed amendments took effect on December 1, 2006…specifically changing language in six rules…Rule 16, 26, 33, 34, 37 and 45…with particular attention to electronic discovery issues…or “discovery of electronically stored information (ESI)”.
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eDiscovery …obtaining information in electronic format allows for the capture of metadata…Metadata is the electronic information that is often hidden in an electronic file…”smoking gun”?...perhaps…but the emails, office memos and other communications can also support the factual basis of your clients case.
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Unique characteristics of electronic data..
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eDiscovery …most corporations and law firms continue to struggle with the electronic component of discovery…continuing to only deal with the paper side and never seeing emails, etc….as this changes it will be very important for law firms to have the right tools for review and production of electronic information…and it will require the law firm to have a clear understanding as to the technical information flow within their client or opponents data systems…
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eDiscovery Unique characteristics of electronic data.. informal nature…email = conversation…mostly unguarded remarks preservation…electronic data is easily changed by simple routine tasks…a “hold” on electronic information requires a corporation to have a plan in place and to anticipate possible action deletion…not necessarily…hitting the delete key only deletes the pointer to the file, not the file itself
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eDiscovery Unique characteristics of electronic data.. storage locations…can be stored anywhere in the world..from local drives to mainframes thousands of miles away…to USB drives carried on a key chain disorganized…seldom in specific locations…so over the years one person did it this way and another did it this way, etc volume…10 employees, 30-60 emails per day = 300-600 emails = 60,000-120,000 per year….1,000 employees?…docs? Calendars? Spreadsheets?
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eDiscovery Unique characteristics of electronic data.. redundancy…daily, weekly, monthly backup tapes…someone may think they have destroyed something, but it may live forever on backup archives of their company or the “to:” company costs…edata is already searchable, sortable, and with the right software…manageable…vs paper? accuracy…no degradation with the 20 th file copy alterations…perhaps impossible to detect in docs, pictures or audio
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eDiscovery - the process For paper discovery… an attorney would visit their clients office and walk through to determine people, file cabinets, record centers, employee files, off-site storage and any other relevant place documents may be filed…typically, you can be comfortable that you have located all the documents that have been relevant to the discovery request.
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eDiscovery - the process For electronic discovery… an attorney will need to walk through the computer infrastructure with their client…understanding where documents are created, stored, printed, backed up, exchanged, etc….in the relevant parties work computers, and personal computers…it will be the law firm and their clients duty to “know or reasonably know” that the electronic data is preserved and where. Attorneys will need to know technical terms to communicate with their client
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eDiscovery - electronic structure Computers – hardware storage units of measure…bits and bytes smallest unit of measure on a computer is a bit(0’s and 1’s)…a byte is about 8 bits a Kilobyte(KB) is = to 1024 bytes a megabyte(Mb) is = to 1,048,576 bytes a gigabyte(Gb) is = to 1,073,741,824 bytes a terabyte(Tb) is = to 1,099,511,627,776 bytes a word processed test page is 2K or about 2,000 bytes 1 terabyte = 50,000,000 million pages
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Perspective Average Volume: 12Gb Gigabyte: 1,073,741,824 bytes Subtotal: 12,884,901,888 bytes Page size: 3000 bytes Pages: 4,294,967 Ream: 500 pages Ream height: 2” Total Height: 17,180” Total Height in feet: 1431’ 8” Sears Tower (Chicago): 1450’
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eDiscovery - electronic structure Computers - software Application Software – MS Office, databases, etc Internet Software – browsers, listservs, chatrooms Email – corporate, web(Yahoo), InstantMessenger Operating Systems – Windows 95/98, 2000, XP, Linux, Apple OS, etc. Audit Trails, Internet Service Providers
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eDiscovery - electronic structure Computers – LANS, WANS and Internet Local Area Network – contained within one office connected by wire or wireless… Wide Area Network – multi office environment within the corporation Off site – redundant disaster recovery system data could be stored anywhere….
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eDiscovery - electronic structure Other pieces… PDA’s – IPhones, Blackberrys Laptops USB storage devices Security systems Telephone systems and voice mail Cell phones Digital Cameras Copiers and Faxes…etc, etc, etc….
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Are the courts savvy to all this? For instance: Zubulake v.UBS Warburg, 217 F.R.D. 309 (S.D.N.Y 2003) A dispute involving employment discrimination allegations
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Ultimately the court concluded that UBS willfully deleted relevant emails…
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The court granted an adverse inference instruction to the jury…
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The court also noted that defense counsel was partly to blame because they failed in its duty to locate, preserve and timely produce the emails…
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In April 2005, the jury awarded Ms. Zubulake damages of $29,000,000.00
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