Getting Rid of Data: Why it s So Hard | Information Management

Many organizations think they are taking the right approach to information overload: buy ever-cheaper storage solutions, lower compliance risk by saving all data and focus more resources on solutions for turning all this data into actionable intelligence. Unfortunately, storing and managing data stores that only get bigger with time is very expensive, and instead of reducing risk, it dramatically increases costs and risks associated with e-discovery.

According to Gartner, IT shops already spend between 2 and 3 percent of revenues on data management, which can add up to hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars each year. And according to IDC, corporate data volumes grew by about 50 percent last year. The fact is, no matter how inexpensive storage devices become, the total cost of managing data will continue to grow. And while some data must be retained for its business, legal or compliance value, retaining data that has no such value increases the complexity and cost of every hold issued by the legal department in response to an e-discovery request.

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How can IT organizations defensibly dispose of data to control IT costs while satisfying the requirement for legal holds? The answer is a robust, cross-functional information governance program.

via Getting Rid of Data: Why it s So Hard.

Court Rejects Distinction between “Original Thumb Drives” and Forensic Images of the Same, Orders Production : Electronic Discovery Law

In this case, plaintiff sought to compel the production of forensic images of certain “flash” or “thumb” drives.  The images were created by a neutral third-party expert upon agreement of the parties following defendant’s refusal to produce the drives for inspection.  The original drives were then destroyed.  Defendant objected to production, arguing that plaintiff had previously requested access to the thumb drives, but not the forensic images, thus attempting to draw a distinction between the two.  The court rejected defendant’s argument reasoning that “if the original thumb drives were discoverable, Capsicum’s forensic images of the thumb drives must also be discoverable, and Océ need not propound a new discovery request for what amounts to the exact same information.”

via Court Rejects Distinction between “Original Thumb Drives” and Forensic Images of the Same, Orders Production : Electronic Discovery Law.

The Lure and Lore of EDD Commodity Pricing | Law.com

Pieces of the e-discovery process like bulk document scanning, backup tape restoration, or small, straightforward cases may be done for a set price. However, vendors are in fierce competition for business, and pricing plans obscure the true cost of e-discovery services. For example, some vendors offer free or inexpensive collection but charge for processing. “That all sounds good in theory, but you have to know that if a vendor offers one piece for free they have to be making money somewhere,” says Speros.

Unfortunately, there is no standard pricing model used by e-discovery consultants and vendors, and their models are often deliberately opaque. Some aspects of the work are billed by volume, others by the hour or by gigabyte of data processed. Often, these pricing models can provide bad incentives for vendors and lead not just to overbilling, but poorly designed processes. Speros says that too often lawyers do not understand what vendors are offering.

In fact, many times the pricing models may actually induce vendors to perform unnecessary tasks, but which generate more fees. “When vendors were getting paid per page produced, you’d see a lot of blank pages printed and unnecessary documents produced,” says Speros. “Pricing per gigabyte of data produced is more predictable, but you find that when compressed files or other unforeseen issues are stumbled upon, the true size of a discovery request explodes.”

For lawyers who fail to understand the pricing model their vendor partners are using, it can be difficult to predict costs. But surprisingly, some lawyers will tell you that e-discovery costs are hard to control not because of vendor pricing plans, but because lawyers do not understand their own efforts. “The cost paid for vendor services is dwarfed by the cost of review,” says Socha. “For every dollar spent for every other facet of litigation support, five, six, often 10 dollars are spent for review. Vendor pricing is not the pivot problem. The problem is that way too much data is reviewed.”

Unfortunately, some bad incentives push lawyers to overreach and preserve more data than necessary. Of course, lawyers get paid more, but a fear of sanctions for failure to produce evidence often induces lawyers to preserve and review too much data.

Sanctions for failure to preserve electronic information are rare, but a few high-profile cases have convinced many lawyers that they need to collect and preserve all potentially discoverable data in a matter, regardless of cost. This mania can destroy any projected budget and inflate the cost of many cases, especially in the review process. “There is a perception that there is an established standard of care to review every document you can,” says Speros. “There is no such standard. The standard is to be reasonable in what you do.”

Controlling the scope of discovery can be realized if senior litigators are able to define and limit the scope of discovery. Most importantly, they need to clearly define data sources that will not be searched because the cost of preserving them would exceed the likely value of obtaining them, or because the same information can be obtained more cheaply from other sources. “It’s best to err on the side of not doing too much, but I know from experience it’s hard to do,” says Socha. “It’s an uncomfortable and awkward conversation to explain to the client why you racked up so many bills, but most lawyers, and, to my dismay, judges as well, feel like there is a duty to search all the data sources you can possibly find.”

via The Lure and Lore of EDD Commodity Pricing.

Interest in Records Management Rises, Email Still Badly Managed

e-Discovery and Efficiency

On the good news front it seems that many enterprises are beginning to see the value of e-Discovery software and the value of moving from paper to electronic records. For enterprises with no records management system, the average legal e-Discovery request takes 25 days, while with one it takes 12 days.

For those using paper, the corresponding figures are 19 days on average, with 28% taking more than a month. Paper is also considered a good deal less efficient than e-Discovery software, which is reckoned to be three times more efficient than paper.

Search was also considered key to successful e-Discovery processes with 47% using ad-hoc search across file shares and email systems to find discoverable records. A further 24% use native search in their ECM or RM system, while 7% use enterprise search.

via Interest in Records Management Rises, Email Still Badly Managed.

Mechanisms That Help Reduce the Cost of E-Discovery | NJ Law Journal

No matter how vigilant, there is no way to fully insulate yourself from a potential lawsuit. It should come as no surprise that defending a lawsuit, even one where you are ultimately not liable, can be costly. Advancements in technology, including the ubiquitous use of e-mail, can significantly increase the cost of litigation. With all of the unavoidable expenses associated with litigation, in these economic times it is necessary to implement mechanisms that help curtail the cost of litigation, especially with regard to electronic discovery.

RELEVANT COURT RULES REGARDING E-DISCOVERY

Courts have recognized the importance of technological advancements in litigation by implementing rules that require parties to produce electronic information in discovery. Indeed, both the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the New Jersey Rules of Court (collectively, the “court rules”) require parties to produce their electronically stored information during litigation. Federal Rules 26(a)(1) and N.J. Rules 4:18-1(a).

In federal actions, parties are required to disclose, among other things, documents and other objects within their possession that may be used to support their claims or defenses prior to receiving a discovery request. Federal Rules 26(a)(1)(A)(ii). As of December 1, 2006, the term “documents” has been expanded to include ESI among the type of information and documents produced in litigation. Similarly, the N.J. Rules provide that a party may request ESI from its adversary. N.J. Rules 4:18-1(a).

Although not formally defined in either set of the court rules, in practice it is understood that ESI includes information “created, manipulated, communicated, stored, and best utilized in digital form, requiring the use of computer hardware and software.” “Electronically Stored Information: The December 2006 Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,” Kenneth J. Withers, Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property, Vol.4 (2), 171, 173. Although the most commonly requested form of ESI is e-mail, the court rules require production of electronic data in formats other than e-mail.

The court rules have attempted to provide some limitations to the production requirements of electronic discovery, presumably in an effort to achieve fairness and balance. For example, in the context of a federal case, “[a] party need not provide discovery of electronically stored information from sources that the party identifies as not reasonably accessible because of undue burden or cost.” Federal Rules 26(b)(2)(B). However, even with limitations, the production of ESI can be very expensive and onerous.

via Mechanisms That Help Reduce the Cost of E-Discovery.

Pa. Court Weighs In on E-Discovery

An electronic discovery request in a dispute over the authenticity of a classic car has prompted a rare opinion from a Pennsylvania court on the emerging issues surrounding the discovery of electronically stored files by litigants in a civil case.

In Brooks v. Frattaroli, PICS Case No. 09-1709 (C.P. Lebanon Oct. 5, 2009), Lebanon County Common Pleas Judge Bradford H. Charles granted the defendants’ motion for a protective order, ruling that the plaintiff’s discovery request to enter the defendant’s property to inspect and copy computer files was overly broad.

via Legal Technology – Pa. Court Weighs In on E-Discovery .