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What is Ediscovery? eDiscovery fits into both of those categories, which makes it the third type of concept/process. Ediscovery. is the understanding of preserving, processing, reviewing, and producing electronically stored information (ESI). I Googled “What is ediscovery?” What is metadata?
Lighthouse said that this acquisition marks its first entry into document review, with the addition of advanced search and analytics technology, and experts who can help clients use these tools to find and classify sensitive data and automate key review workflows.
Listen to this podcast interview of Michael Quartararo in its entirety here or read the highlights below to get important insights on getting your e-discovery certification. He is also the author of the 2016 book Project Management in ElectronicDiscovery , now in its second edition. Dive into what is e-discovery ?
The ABA TechReport combines data from the annual ABA LegalTechnology Survey Report with expert analysis, observations, and predictions from leaders in the legaltechnology field. Software for Litigation & E-Discovery. Every Wednesday, we’ll be posting a new report from one of our experts, so stay tuned!
Especially when it comes to technology, many lawyers are reluctant to put their confidence in workflows and solutions that seem to operate in a black box. Technology-assistedreview is a prime example—although the use of predictive coding and other advanced analytics have been widely accepted in the U.S.
At its Relativity Fest user conference in Chicago today, the e-discovery company Relativity announced the forthcoming release of Relativity aiR for Review, the first of a planned series of products that will use generative artificial intelligence to help legal professionals in their work.
This increase in complexity and volume required a different set of professional skills needed for litigation practitioners that combined an intimate knowledge of both the litigation process and how technology can be used to drive efficiencies in the e-discovery process. Legal Process Improvement. Automation.
With workplace and regulatory investigations on the rise, leveraging e-discoverytechnologies are no longer exclusively a litigation-specific endeavor. As such, the principles and criteria guiding the management of investigations differ from those guiding a responsive review.
Document review has changed. Attorneys must confront dense forests of data to uncover what matters quickly, and doing so without a little help from AI has become exceedingly difficult.
Legal document review is often viewed as the most expensive part of eDiscovery, and many attorneys believe that there’s no way around it. If you hold that belief too, then I have good news for you: Document review doesn’t have to come with such a high price tag. Spending Too Much Time on Search Term Negotiations.
A product launched this week claims to be the fastest search and review platform in legal for matters involving large document collections — discovery, investigations and compliance — and the first to seamlessly combine keyword and algorithmic search. So is it the fastest document search in legal?
[{"content":{"text":" When ChatGPT was released two years ago, attorneys and legaltechnology experts had one big question: Whatu2019s going to change? While the ethical and regulatory implications of the technology remain to be seen, its potential to transform the way attorneys get work done is undeniable.
The themes shifted from last years, which focused on generative AI as a new, more intuitive software interface that enabled legal professionals to access information more easily. The tool is designed to automate over 80% of review processes and complete them up to 90% faster than TAR. This year, the discussions matured.
Our latest post dives into the world of artificial intelligence advancements in e-discovery, specifically focusing on the use of LLMs for document review. The experiment had two phases: An initial pass by GPT-4, based on the same instructions provided to the attorney reviewers who performed the original review.
Alex Chatzistamatis, senior principal enterprise architect with Nuix, discusses the ways that technological advancements like machine learning and artificial intelligence are shaping the future of e-discovery and other areas of the legal profession. I look at this from two facets. One is the remote employees.
More than ever before, legal teams are leveraging AI to reduce overheads and position themselves as strategic business partners. But in a crowded marketplace of solutions, which generative AI legal use cases are no-brainers for in-house counsel? Some advanced legal AI tools are still in their nascency, and carry greater risk.
Wendy Cole, product marketing director, legal tech with OpenText, explains how Axcelerate Investigation is helping organizations regain control of their ECA process and quickly assess the merits of their case. How have legal teams typically tackled challenges such as traditional approaches to ECA and investigations?
Recently, the phrase “modern law” has been floating around in the legal industry. In a nutshell, modern law refers to the idea of taking a business-centered approach to legal practice by embracing emerging technologies and new partnerships to increase efficiency and make smarter operational decisions.
Julian Ackert, managing director at iDiscovery Solutions, discusses the differences between structured and unstructured data and how database discovery can allow a legal team to conserve resources and get the best outcome for their client. Data, information and facts just happen to be recorded electronically in today’s world).
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