Google: Digital Music Case Has Cloud Law Implications – Informationweek (Thomas Claburn)

In an effort to defend the legal basis of cloud computing, Google on Wednesday asked a New York court for permission to file an amicus curiae, or friend-of-the-court brief, in a record industry lawsuit against ReDigi, an online market that facilitates the resale of digital music files.

A letter from the law firm representing Google, Fenwick & West, warns against granting the preliminary injunction requested by plaintiff Capitol Records. “A premature decision on incomplete facts could create unintended uncertainties for the cloud computing industry,” the letter states.

The court, however, denied Google’s request, on the basis that the parties in the lawsuit should be able to address the issues without assistance.

ReDigi describes itself as a used record store for digital music. It offers consumers a way to buy and sell pre-owned digital songs.

Record companies don’t like this idea because they assume people purporting to sell digital songs are actually just making copies, in violation of copyright law. Capitol Records sued ReDigi last month for copyright infringement, alleging just that.

via Google: Digital Music Case Has Cloud Law Implications – Cloud-computing – Platform as a Service – Informationweek.

E-Discovery: What Businesses Should Know | The Small Business Authority

Remember the Enron email scandal? As part of a federal investigation into the fraudulent activities going on at Enron in the early part of this century, hundreds of emails were released to the court and eventually to the public. ABC News1 reported that many of these emails “could prove to be embarrassing,” not only for Enron but also for employees whose names were attached to the personal emails they’d sent that were now being revealed to the world. The gathering of these emails was an example of e-discovery, a trend that companies and individuals will continue to face as part of the digital era.

What is E-Discovery?

E-discovery is a broad term used to describe any situation in which electronic data, such as email or internet postings, are sought in a criminal or civil case. The discovery process allows plaintiffs and defendants to exchange information during pretrial preparation, and the court will actually compel information to be turned over if it’s relevant or “probative” to the case.

In days past, discovery was limited to phone records, paper documents, and the like, since those were all that existed. Records were available only of the things people had chosen to write down, and the extensive amounts of paperwork turned over in cases were cumbersome to go through.

Today, however, e-discovery is changing the game. According to figures compiled in a recent Law.com2 article, Twitter users send more than 200 million status updates every day, and people on the internet send 13,800,000 messages every single hour. All these tweets and emails and instant messages and Facebook posts and chats that are flying around cyberspace create a written record of things that might otherwise have been discussed over the phone or in person. Because the records are digital, all of the data and information are stored somewhere and rarely eliminated, no matter how hard you try to get rid of the data. Further, the digital format makes it easy to sort through data quickly to find relevant information.

These online communications are generally not privileged except in certain unusual and limited circumstances. This means that all of these records can be accessed as part of e-discovery, and they can have a significant impact on litigation by providing evidence of things that otherwise might have been unprovable. For example, according to USA Today,3 the twins who sued Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg argued that evidence existed in instant messages that would prove that Zuckerberg had stolen the idea for Facebook from their own website plan. Although a judge dismissed the twins’ suits, it’s easy to imagine a case in which a message sent and forgotten many years ago could be uncovered and used in litigation.

via E-Discovery: What Businesses Should Know | The Small Business Authority | Small Business Services and Small Business Solutions.

Sanctions Ordered for Failure to Adequately “Preserve, Search for, and Collect Potentially Relevant Information” : Electronic Discovery Law

Naaco Materials Handling Group, Inc. v. Lilly Co., No. 11-2415 AV, 2011 WL 5986649 (W.D. Tenn. Nov. 16, 2011)

In this case, the court found that defendant “failed to take reasonable steps to preserve, search for, and collect potentially relevant information . . . after its duty to preserve evidence was triggered by being served with the complaint” which may have resulted in the destruction of relevant evidence.  Further, defendant failed to present an adequately prepared and knowledgeable 30(b)(6) deponent.  Accordingly, sanctions were imposed, including, among other things, additional discovery, additional forensic imaging at defendant’s expense, and monetary sanctions.

Plaintiff accused defendant of illegally accessing its proprietary website on over 40,000 occasions.  Early in the litigation process, the court granted plaintiff’s motion for expedited discovery which  resulted in an order allowing plaintiff’s expert to conduct a forensic examination of defendant’s computers to determine which, if any, were used to access plaintiff’s proprietary information and to make a copy of any hard drive on which such access was detected.  Evidence of access was found on 17 of the 35 computers subject to examination.  As litigation progressed, and in particular following the deposition of defendant’s 30(b)(6) deponent, plaintiff became concerned that relevant information had been lost and moved to prevent further spoliation and for defendant to bear many discovery-related costs.

The court’s opinion identified several discovery violations, including defendant’s failure to adequately and timely disseminate a legal hold notice; defendant’s failure to “to prevent emails from being deleted, to prevent data from being overwritten, or to identify and preserve backup tapes which might contain the only electronic evidence of access to [plaintiff’s] secure dealer website;” and defendant’s failure to “collect evidence from the key players or to search key players’ computers to see if ESI existed or had been deleted.”  Further, defendant “left collection efforts to its employees to search their own computers without supervision or oversight from management” and took no effort to follow up with its employees or to document any of its search and collection efforts.  Defendant also failed to provide an adequately prepared 30(b)(6) deponent.  Accordingly, the court determined that defendant was “at a minimum, negligent in discharging its discovery obligations.”  The court noted, however, that plaintiff did not produce proof that relevant evidence was in fact destroyed and that the extent of prejudice was therefore in question; more substantial sanctions were therefore not warranted.  Nonetheless, the court found that lesser sanctions were appropriate.

via Sanctions Ordered for Failure to Adequately “Preserve, Search for, and Collect Potentially Relevant Information” : Electronic Discovery Law.

Efficient E-Discovery: How Will Model Order Impact Eastern District Practice? | Texas Lawyer

In September, the Advisory Council for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit issued a model order that limits electronic discovery in patent litigation. The Eastern District of Texas judges plan to meet in February to discuss the model order, but lawyers already have followed its guidance in several cases pending in the patent-heavy district.

U.S. Magistrate Judge John Love of Tyler has granted an order limiting e-discovery in at least one case pending in his court based on the model order.

In general, the model order limits parties requesting electronic discovery to a total of five search terms per custodian party. The parties jointly may agree to modify this limit without the court’s leave.

But if a party serves production requests with search terms beyond the limits agreed to by the parties or granted by the court, the requesting party must “bear all reasonable costs caused by such additional discovery.”

“Our objective was to bring efficiency and reasonableness to the expensive discovery process,” say Randall Rader, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. And he’s pleased that some lawyers in the Eastern District are using the model order as a template for handling discovery in patent cases.

U.S. District Judge Leonard Davis of Tyler, who will become the chief judge of the Eastern District next year, says the judges in the district will discuss a committee report on the model order at their February meeting.

Davis says, “I think [Judge Rader has] raised a very legitimate concern, primarily around the cost of email production. The question is: What is the best way to reduce that but at the same time give people the discovery that they need?”

via Texas Lawyer – Efficient E-Discovery: How Will Model Order Impact Eastern District Practice?.

E-discovery ruling in KPMG case: Brace for ‘profound’ impact? | Thomson Reuters

For all of its zeal in squelching what it considers unfounded class actions against U.S. businesses, the Chamber of Commerce rarely strays from appellate courts to venture into the weeds of a federal district court discovery dispute. But Monday, the Chamber filed an amicus brief in an uncertified wage-and-hour class action against the accounting firm KPMG, warning that if U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon of Manhattan federal court adopts the order of a magistrate judge, the ruling will set “a dangerous precedent” that will be of “profound significance to businesses in America.” Piling on in their own Nov. 8 amicus brief, the Washington Legal Foundation and the International Association of Defense Counsel assert that the magistrate’s ruling could fundamentally distort class-action litigation by potentially making it cheaper to settle a case than to comply with discovery orders.

So what is this supposedly devastating, albeit preliminary, ruling? On Oct. 11, U.S. Magistrate Judge James Cott issued an order resolving a dispute between KPMG and Outten & Golden, the law firm representing two proposed classes of entry-level auditors who claim the accounting firm owes them overtime wages. The fight involved the computer hard drives of potential class members: KPMG and class counsel agreed that the plaintiffs could use sampling software to limit the electronic information KPMG would have to preserve, but they couldn’t agree on the sampling criteria or the number of computer hard drives to include in the sample. KPMG’s lawyers at Sidley Austin moved for an order limiting the sample size to 100 randomly selected hard drives.

Instead, Cott ruled that KPMG has to preserve the hard drive of every potential class member. “Prudence favors retaining all relevant materials,” Cott wrote, pointing to the seminal e-discovery ruling, Zubulake v. UBS Warburg. The magistrate judge reasoned that because McMahon, the district judge, hasn’t yet ruled on class certification in the KPMG audit associate case, every entry-level auditor in the opt-in action is a potential “key player” under Zubulake, whether in the Manhattan class action or in another case that could be filed depending on how McMahon ultimately defines the class.

“These audit associates are, at the very least, key players in any one of many potential actions that could result if the motion to certify is denied,” Cott wrote. “With so many unknowns involved at this stage in the litigation, permitting KPMG to destroy the hard drives is simply not appropriate at this time.”

via E-discovery ruling in KPMG case: Brace for ‘profound’ impact?.

Will New Electronic Discovery Rules Save Organizations Millions or Deny Justice? – Forbes

Special Post by Matthew Nelson, Esq.

Lawyers and federal judges are currently discussing a formal proposal to amend the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (“Rules”) that could save some organizations millions of dollars.  The Rules are significant because they dictate the procedures every party in federal civil court must follow when negotiating the exchange, or discovery, of documents and other information as part of a lawsuit.  Sometimes Rule changes simply include minor modifications to add clarity.  Other times, Rule changes like those being considered at this week’s Federal Rules Advisory Committee (“Advisory Committee”) meeting on November 7 and 8 in Washington, D.C., are potentially game changing.

A recent jury verdict for almost $1 billion following a court-ordered eDiscovery sanction, combined with a steady overall increase in eDiscovery related sanctions since last year, have helped fuel enterprise concerns about the cost of data preservation. See E.I. Dupont De Nemours and Company v. Kolon Industries, Inc., (E.D. Va. Jul. 21, 2011); and Gibson Dunn, “2011 Mid Year E-Discovery Update” (July 2011) (eDiscovery related sanctions nearly doubled between July 2010 and 2011).  As a result of these concerns, many large organizations with massive amounts of electronically stored information (“ESI”), are calling for Rule changes.  They are looking to curb the cost of identifying and preserving potentially relevant ESI that could help them avoid paying attorneys millions of dollars to sift through mounds of emails and other electronic files to find the right documents for each new case. These large enterprise litigants claim the lack of clarity in the current Rules unfairly requires organizations to err on the side of preserving evidence early and broadly or face the risk of stiff court sanctions if information that may have been relevant to a case is lost or deleted.  They see the problem as a double-edged sword because in many cases, the more ESI preserved, the higher the costs of eDiscovery.  On the other hand, failure to preserve enough ESI increases their risk of sanctions.

continued @  Will New Electronic Discovery Rules Save Organizations Millions or Deny Justice? – Forbes.

Samsung, Google benefit from ruling in patent fight with Apple – The China Post

A German court’s recent decision to ban the sale of Apple products in Germany dealt a blow to the U.S. tech giant, while offering a positive outlook for Google’s Android alliance.

Munich-based patent expert Florian Mueller said the Mannheim Regional Court in Germany on Friday barred Apple from selling any mobile devices infringing on two Motorola Mobility patents in the country — the single largest market in Europe.

The court also determined that Apple owes Motorola Mobility, which is now owned by Google Inc, damages for past infringements since April 2003, and Apple may be banned from selling wireless devices until the court reaches a second decision, Mueller wrote on his blog “FOSS Patents.”

via Samsung, Google benefit from ruling in patent fight with Apple – The China Post.

Current Listing of States That Have Enacted E-Discovery Rules : Electronic Discovery Law

More and more states are adopting statutes and court rules addressing the discovery of electronically stored information.  Here is a current list with links to the relevant provisions.

complete list: Current Listing of States That Have Enacted E-Discovery Rules : Electronic Discovery Law.

Identification and Disclosure of electronically stored information | webanalyticsworld.net

Under English or American law (or any other common law system), you or your company may be ordered by a court to identify and disclose not just physical documents but also electronically stored information (ESI) as part of a litigation process. This could apply to you even if you are not a party to the court proceedings.

Location of the ESI

Data is often stored or replicated in an external hosting centre or within a software application – particularly in relation to SaaS software, or in a corporate data centre. If numerous data centres are used they are usually in different physical locations which could be in various countries. The court order to disclose data may well conflict with compliance and privacy requirements in relation to data in the countries in which the data is actually held. However for the purposes of complying with a court order the actual location of the data and the local rules applying to the storage of the data cannot be used as a reason to refuse disclosure.

For example in AccessData Corporation v ALSTE Technologies GmbH a US court ordered a German company to disclose emails stored in Germany as part of the disclosure process in a court case, although the company argued that this breached the German Data Protection Act.

via Identification and Disclosure of electronically stored information.

Dutch court bans Samsung Galaxy S, SII and Ace in Europe starting Oct. 15 – Computerworld

A court in The Hague on Wednesday banned the shipping of three Samsung Galaxy smartphones to Europe as of Oct. 15, ruling that the company has infringed an Apple photo management patent.

The Samsung Galaxy S, SII and Ace were banned because Samsung infringes on Apple’s EP 2.058.868 patent, the court found. The patent is titled “Portable Electronic Device for Photo Management” and describes a way to scroll through a photo gallery using finger gestures on a touchscreen.

Samsung infringes the Apple patent by using Android 2.3 in the three phones, according to the ruling by Judge E.F. Brinkman. Android 3.x that is used for tablets does not infringe this patent. The patent issue can be fixed by updating the Android software on the phones to Android 3.x, Samsung said in court earlier this month and that point was also noted by the judge in the ruling.

via Dutch court bans Samsung Galaxy S, SII and Ace in Europe starting Oct. 15 – Computerworld.