Over-estimating both costs and risks in the eDisclosure Practice Direction « e-Disclosure Information Project

There is a general sense that the eDisclosure Practice Direction has broad acceptance amongst lawyers – those who have read it before commenting on it, anyway. It is not just another CPR burden, nor is it something to fear – whatever you may hear from scaremongers with an interest in making it seem so.

I do not need to declare my interest in the success of the eDisclosure Practice Direction and its Electronic Documents Questionnaire. I helped draft it and have advocated its principles – of informed co-operation as a pre-requisite for proportionate disclosure – for years. It is good then to report that the initial reactions from lawyers seem to be favourable, even amongst those who accept that there are challenges. Most recognise that the challenges derive from the existence of the electronic documents, not from the measures being taken to control them.

We need to know, in due course, how it works out in practice. Meanwhile, it is worth drawing attention to two wholly predictable reactions which emerged within a few days of publication. The first is properly the subject of debate, though that debate will be more valuable when the proponents on each side have some experience of working with the PD, or have at least run their eyes down its main provisions. The second may appear a matter of nuance, but it is a nuance which matters. The common element is an interest in making the implications of the PD sound more alarming than they are.

via Over-estimating both costs and risks in the eDisclosure Practice Direction « e-Disclosure Information Project.

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Why One Stop Shops Will Rule The World | Guest columns

No one can debate the “megastore effect” on our personal lives. There is something compelling about the ability to visit a single store and shop for a refrigerator, laptop computer, cell phone, car stereo and then grab a snack in the restaurant. Even better, great “megastores” today provide highly experienced consultants to help with your selection. Why do we shop there? They us save time while providing a great selection, low prices, and high quality service from a single company.

Imagine this same approach with your legal department.

You come into work and start your legal dashboard, review which matters require your immediate attention, which matters are over budget or at least headed in that direction, which matters are in litigation and where they are at in e-Discovery. You grab the first cup of coffee and then review the law firm invoices requiring your approval, collaborate with outside counsel, review documents you have purposefully avoided and then grab the second cup of coffee. You check your entity management program to insure the SEC filings have occurred with no delay and that the Board of Directors received their packets for the upcoming board meeting.

via Why One Stop Shops Will Rule The World | Guest columns.

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Internet Wiretapping: Snoop or Safety Tool? | Lance Ulanoff | PCMag.com

Can Federal authorities gain access to encrypted communications and data and still keep privacy intact?

The world is a scary place. It doesn’t look all that bad on the surface. It’s the stuff that you can’t see and hear that gets you. At least this is the U.S. Governmwent’s point of view. Federal authorities want to implement new Internet “Wiretap” regulations that peel back that digital cover and expose it all: the good, the bad, and the ugly.

According to a New York Times report, Federal officials are preparing to ask for some particularly sweeping digital rights and what some might see as heavy-handed rules for virtually every company that helps people communicate in the digital age. You know that Skype conversation you had last week? It would be fair game. So is the data you upload and download to your favorite backup service (if it’s encrypted, that is). Your VoIP calls? They’re on the list, too. Saving money by conducting international business communication over instant messaging or, perhaps, a business class IM tool that encrypts your conversation? Yup, that’s up for grabs.

This, my friends, is the dystopian view of the next digital age, one where the unseen eyes and electronic fingers of Big Brother are everywhere. Nothing is secret, nothing is personal, and everything is watched, marked, collected, and stored.

via Internet Wiretapping: Snoop or Safety Tool? | Lance Ulanoff | PCMag.com.

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DailyTech – Sony Ericsson LiveView is a Remote Control for Your Android

Are you sick of carrying your smartphone around with you everywhere you go? Do you want to stay connected in the bathroom, without risking your smartphone’s life? Do you wish you could see that incoming text message and check all your friends’ status updates without leaving the couch? Sony Ericsson now has an answer to all your troubles – if you have a select Android-based device, that is.

The Sony Ericsson LiveView is basically a remote control for Android-based smartphones. It connects to the devices via Bluetooth, and can be clipped to your belt or worn around your wrist like a watch. From there, you can read incoming SMS messages and RSS feeds, check Twitter and Facebook status updates, listen to your music library, and download apps directly from the Android market to the LiveView.

The LiveView weighs just 15 grams and sports a 1.3″ color OLED display, a power hardkey, a select hardkey, and four navigational softkeys. It displays caller ID information for incoming calls and allows you to remotely silence the ringer when you don’t feel like talking to grandma. It also has a “find your phone” function, when your forgetfulness kicks in.

via DailyTech – Sony Ericsson LiveView is a Remote Control for Your Android.

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Twitter’s Promoted Tweets Sell for $100K and Up – NYTimes.com

Twitter is now selling its Promoted Tweets for $100,000, according to an article in this morning’s Wall St. Journal. Promoted Tweets, which allow companies to buy the top spot on Twitter’s search results page, is just one of the microblogging network’s new advertising initiatives as of late. The idea behind these digital ads is that the service allows companies to associate themselves with a certain trend or keyword. For example, launch partner Starbucks bought their brand name so that anyone searching Twitter for “starbucks” would see an advertisement for the coffee company at the top of the results page.

But while $100,000 is a lot of money to most, Twitter’s Promoted Tweets and its other initiative, Promoted Trends, are experimental, largely unproven and not worth the investment – at least that’s what several advertisers and marketers cited by the WSJ claimed. Their feelings on that matter, however, may soon change thanks to plans Twitter has in store for its ads service.

via Twitter’s Promoted Tweets Sell for $100K and Up – NYTimes.com.

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Abu Dhabi to host global meet on digital forensics

Digital forensics is increasingly playing a critical role in solving crimes as many criminals resort to using the Internet and digital devices in perpetrating their illegal acts.

“Almost every crime that you can think of has some sort of digital evidence in it at this point,” said Dr Ibrahim Bagilli, assistant professor and director of the Advanced Cyber Forensics Research at Zayed University.

While announcing the launch of the second International ICST (Institute for Computer Sciences, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering) Conference on Digital Forensics and Cyber Crime (ICDF2C) next month, Dr Bagilli, chairperson of the conference, explained how digital forensics help in law enforcement, network security and information 
assurance.

“Let’s say you want to shoot someone, you search for a gun (online) and when we get your computer, we can relate that to the crime,” he said.

The ICDF2C, which will be hosted for the first time in the Middle East region in Abu Dhabi from October 4 to 6, will highlight pertinent issues including financial crimes, digital forensic process, training and education, law, multimedia forensics, forensic standardisation and accreditation, cyber crime investigations, cyber criminal psychology, cyber terrorism and software piracy investigations.

According to Dr Bagilli, some of the challenges in the field that will be discussed at the conference are related to network forensics or how to find digital evidence on a network in a legally and scientifically sound manner, how to extract required data quickly from a large volume, the cross-jurisdictional or the legal aspect of the crime, and certification, education and standardisation.

via Abu Dhabi to host global meet on digital forensics.

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Workers Readily Divulge Sensitive Info – Computerworld

Of 135 corporate employees targeted by social engineering hackers in a recent contest, only five refused to give up any business information whatsoever.

All five were women.

At the DefCon hacking conference last month, hackers targeted 17 major corporations, including Google, Wal-Mart, Symantec, Cisco, Microsoft, Pepsi, Ford and Coca-Cola. Sitting in a Plexiglas booth, with an audience watching, contestants called company employees and tried to get them to divulge business and technical details.

via Workers Readily Divulge Sensitive Info – Computerworld.

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Internet: Google, Microsoft push to extend privacy protections to cloud-based e-mail – latimes.com

In a House panel hearing, firms that store users’ e-mail and documents on remote computers want changes to a 1986 law. But law enforcement officials say restrictions could hinder their efforts.

Technology executives and law enforcement officials are clashing over a nearly 25-year-old law that protects Internet users’ private information.

Some of the world’s largest technology companies, including Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp., are pushing for changes to the law — written before the World Wide Web existed — saying it makes it too easy for government investigators to gain access to their customers’ Web-based e-mail and documents. That, the companies say, is bad for the bottom line.

Many consumers and businesses are finding it easier and cheaper to entrust the storage of their e-mail and documents to Web companies such as Google that can store vast amounts of data in the so-called cloud — networks of remote computer centers filled with thousands of high-speed servers.

But the cloud’s wealth of personal data has also attracted law enforcement officials eager to tap into the information to catch and prosecute criminals. They say Congress should be wary about diminishing their powers to investigate crimes in a fast-changing digital landscape where evidence can disappear overseas — or into oblivion — in an instant.

via Internet: Google, Microsoft push to extend privacy protections to cloud-based e-mail – latimes.com.

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U.S. Wants to Make It Easier to Wiretap the Internet – NYTimes.com

Federal law enforcement and national security officials are preparing to seek sweeping new regulations for the Internet, arguing that their ability to wiretap criminal and terrorism suspects is “going dark” as people increasingly communicate online instead of by telephone.

Essentially, officials want Congress to require all services that enable communications — including encrypted e-mail transmitters like BlackBerry, social networking Web sites like Facebook and software that allows direct “peer to peer” messaging like Skype — to be technically capable of complying if served with a wiretap order. The mandate would include being able to intercept and unscramble encrypted messages.

The bill, which the Obama administration plans to submit to lawmakers next year, raises fresh questions about how to balance security needs with protecting privacy and fostering innovation. And because security services around the world face the same problem, it could set an example that is copied globally.

via U.S. Wants to Make It Easier to Wiretap the Internet – NYTimes.com.

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Malware Hits Computerized Industrial Equipment – NYTimes.com

The technology industry is being rattled by a quiet and sophisticated malicious software program that has infiltrated factory computers.

The malware, known as Stuxnet, was discovered by VirusBlokAda, a Belarussian computer security company in July, at least several months after its creation.

Security experts say Stuxnet attacked the software in specialized industrial control equipment made by Siemens by exploiting a previously unknown hole in the Windows operating system.

The malware is the first such attack on critical industrial infrastructure that sits at the foundation of modern economies.

It also displays an array of novel tactics — like an ability to steal design documents or even sabotage equipment in a factory — that suggest its creators are much more sophisticated than hackers whose work has been seen before. The malware casts a spotlight on several security weaknesses.

Eric Chien, the technical director of Symantec Security Response, a security software maker that has studied Stuxnet, said it appeared that the malware was created to attack an Iranian industrial facility. Security experts say that it was most likely staged by a government or government-backed group, in light of the significant expertise and resources required to create it. The specific facility that was in Stuxnet’s crosshairs is not known, though speculation has centered on gas and nuclear installations.

via Malware Hits Computerized Industrial Equipment – NYTimes.com.

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