Information governance will boom in 2012 | Kroll Ontrack (Edward Clark)

Businesses are likely to spend more on compliance and information governance in 2012 in a bid to reduce risks and improve data recovery.

According to Vijay Mhaskar from Symantec, writing for Information Week, information governance is to become a buzzword in 2012 and will be one of the year’s biggest storage and backup trends.

“Information is the great enabler, and the great disabler depending on how it is managed. Companies that will gain control over the risks and costs by protecting their information will enable the adoption of new mobile, social media and cloud technologies,” he explained.

via Information governance will boom in 2012.

81 Percent of E-Discovery Users Head for Cloud Services | TalkinCloud

Most law firms and corporate legal departments aim to bring portions of their e-discovery tasks in-house, according to a recently released Kroll Ontrack survey. But survey results also reveal some major cloud services trends tied to e-discovery.

Kroll Ontrack, in conjunction with Harris Interactive, polled attorneys working for medium-to-large law firms and Fortune 1000 companies. The survey found that 86 percent of the respondents in-sourced some aspect of e-discovery. Information management, collection/preservation, and review ranked among the most frequently in-sourced functions. Kroll Ontrack, based in Minneapolis, provides e-discovery and data recovery among other services.

Other e-discovery providers have also noted the in-house migration of work that law firms and corporate legal teams had previously outsourced to service bureaus or other law firms. Concerns over control and cost fuel this trend.

The in-house push doesn’t exclude cloud services providers and managed services providers, however. Law firms and legal departments may opt to hire a provider to manage its e-discovery software behind the firewall or host a SaaS solution.

e-Discovery and Cloud Services

The Kroll Ontrack survey points to the legal sector’s interest in the latter scenario. Michele Lange, the company’s director of discovery, said 81 percent of the respondents said they plan to leverage the cloud for e-discovery or storage purposes over the next two years.

via 81 Percent of E-Discovery Users Head for Cloud Services | TalkinCloud.

Corporations and Their Lawyers Look to the Cloud for DIY E-discovery | Law.com

When it comes to e-discovery, corporations and law firms are constantly seeking new ways to drive up efficiency while keeping their costs low. A new survey released by legal technology firm Kroll Ontrack reveals that many are looking to do-it-yourself (DIY) discovery platforms to achieve that balance.

The firm conducted the survey in September in preparation for this week’s launch of its Verve e-discovery DIY platform. Respondents included 100 of the Fortune 1000 companies and 100 medium-to-large law firms. The survey looked at the factors driving corporate decisions to outsource versus keeping e-discovery inside.

“We’ve seen the e-discovery market evolve and mature, and organizations are increasingly looking toward DIY e-discovery software platforms,” says Michele Lange, director of product line management for legal technologies at Kroll.

“Corporations and law firms are increasingly doing some of it in-house,” says Lange.

Eighty-six percent of respondents said they are conducting some aspect of e-discovery on their own. “I think this is a much higher percentage than most people that follow the market would guess,” she says.

via Corporations and Their Lawyers Look to the Cloud for DIY E-discovery.

Podcast: Preservation Problems, Federal Rulemaking Efforts & E-Discovery in Criminal Actions | Legal Talk Network

On The ESI Report, host Kelly Kubacki, Attorney in the Thought Leadership & Industry Relations division at Kroll Ontrack welcomes Tom Allman, Attorney and Consultant, and Bill Butterfield, Partner with Hausfeld LLP in Washington, DC, to explore the recent efforts to amend the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, including a discussion on whether amendments are even necessary or an actual possibility. On the Bits & Bytes Legal Analysis, Kroll Ontrack Legal Correspondent, Ben Kirk focuses on the facts surrounding United States v. Briggs.

via Preservation Problems, Federal Rulemaking Efforts & E-Discovery in Criminal Actions | Legal Talk Network.

PODCAST: Global E-discovery Rules and Challenges | Legal Talk Network

Interested in e-discovery rules across the globe? On this May edition of The ESI Report, host Kelly Kubacki, Staff Attorney in the Legal Technologies division at Kroll Ontrack welcomes Mark Surguy, Partner with Eversheds International and Tracey Stretton, Legal Consultant at Kroll Ontrack U.K., to explore electronic discovery rules, procedures and important developments from around the world. In the Bits & Bytes Legal Analysis segment, Ben Kirk, Kroll Ontrack Legal Correspondent, takes a look at In re Facebook PPC Advertising Litigation.

via Global E-discovery Rules and Challenges | Legal Talk Network.

Strong UK presence at LegalTech 2011 « e-Disclosure Information Project

Strong UK presence at LegalTech 2011

LegalTech 2011 is only a few days away and the programme is packed. Almost everyone whose name has appeared in these pages is taking part in something, and I will not attempt to list them all. Following on, however, from my recent piece about the Georgetown Advanced e-Discovery Institute (see International discovery, sanctions, ethics and US-UK comparisons at Georgetown) and the growing mutual interest in US e-Discovery and UK e-Disclosure, I thought it worth drawing your attention to the sessions involving UK participants. If I have missed any, please let me know.

Epiq Systems have two panels involving well-known UK participants. Greg Wildisen of Epiq moderates a panel called Navigating the Challenges of Cross-Border Regulatory Investigations with panelists including Professor Dominic Regan and David Cracknell of Slaughter and May’s London office. That is followed by a panel called Managing a Global Review while Minimising Risk moderated by Laura Kibbe of Epiq. The panelists include Senior Master Whitaker and Neil Mirchandani of Hogan Lovells in London. Non-UK participants known to readers of this blog include US Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck (who has teamed up with Master Whitaker in various jurisdictions, including Brussels and Hong Kong), and David Kessler who has recently moved to become Co-Head of E-Discovery at Fulbright & Jaworski – an entertaining and informative fellow, David, as I discovered to my relief when he was on a LegalTech panel which I moderated for Epiq last year (I say “relief” because it can be an interesting business, moderating panels of people you have never met before). Anyone interested in global and cross-border matters should attend these sessions.

Andrew Szczech of Kroll OnTrack UK takes part in a panel called Trends in Social Media and Cloud Computing. Jan Durant, IT Director of Lewis Silkin is on a panel called Business Processes Utilising SharePoint. Alex Dunstan-Lee of KPMG in London is doing a session called The Clearwell E-Discovery Platform: did you know? UK solicitor Mark Ross, VP legal solutions at Integreon, is covering Legal Process Outsourcing: Ethical, Practical and Legislative Considerations.

Apart from the UK, the non-US world is represented by Michelle Mahoney, Director of Applied Legal Technology at Mallesons Stephen Jaques in Australia, talking about the Intersection of Project Management and Practice Support. She was anointed Practice Management Champion at ILTA last year, so knows what she is talking about.

via Strong UK presence at LegalTech 2011 « e-Disclosure Information Project.

Are E-Discovery Sanctions Tough Enough? | Law.com

Sanctions are perhaps the most devastating penalty a judge can impose on a party in civil litigation. In disputes over electronic evidence in litigation, sanctions have generated a lot of attention, though some judges say the impact is overstated. “I would like to straighten out the idea that judges issue a lot of sanctions,” says Shira Scheindlin, United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York, who recently issued her first e-discovery sanctions since 2004. “In six years I have issued no sanctions. Even if the number of sanctions is going up, in terms of raw numbers, it’s still very small.”

Lawyers are on notice from courts that sloppy document retention policies and mistakes can lead to sanctions and other penalties. But sanctions seem to have had little impact in pushing the legal community to take e-discovery more seriously. In fact, sanctions may actually be an ineffective tool for the bench to push attorneys to manage e-discovery more effectively.

In a recent ruling, The Pension Committee of Montreal v. Banc of America Securites, Judge Scheindlin issued sanctions because parties had neglected their duty to preserve evidence. She says she was frustrated to find that parties in that case seemed not to have learned to properly handle electronically stored information since she had last issued e-discovery sanctions in a widely noted decision six years ago. “I was surprised that so many years later not enough had changed,” says Scheindlin. “Lawyers should be on notice that their clients have a duty to preserve.”

According to law firm Gibson Dunn’s 2009 Mid-Year Update on E-Discovery Cases, the number of e-discovery sanctions have been trending upwards. Surveying sixty-one reported electronic discovery opinions, more than half involved the consideration of sanctions, and in twenty-two courts imposed some form of sanction. A similar 2008 survey conducted by e-discovery vendor Kroll Ontrack found half that number of sanctions.

But e-discovery analyst Barry Murphy of Murphy Insights notes that very few sanctions for e-discovery have had any real teeth, and the few that have involved large dollar mounts have been overturned. In some cases, e-discovery snafus have led to negative inferences that almost certainly impacted the outcome, but he says even those rulings seem to have had little impact. “The sanctions we’re seeing are too small to register with many people, and while negative inferences may lead to a bad outcome, the impact is not always obvious,” says Murphy. “Once we see a sanction for many millions of dollars because of a failure to preserve electronic evidence, the point will be clearer.”

Perhaps the largest penalty related to e-discovery failures was Coleman (Parent) Holdings, Inc. v. Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc., No.CA03-5045 (15th Jud. Cir., Palm Beach Cty., Fla.), rev’d on other grounds, No. 4D05-2606 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. Mar. 21, 2007), in which an award of $1.45 billion and a $15 million fine were issued after Morgan Stanley failed to produce electronic records. However, this potentially devastating outcome was reversed; blunting what would have otherwise been a wake-up call to the profession.

Murphy noted in his blog that most sanctions for e-discovery failures run from several thousand to hundreds of thousands of dollars. This may be a lot of money in some contexts, but he says is not enough to light a fire under most corporate legal departments. “These penalties are not enough to scare anyone into implementing new document retention policies that cost millions of dollars to put in place,” he says.

E-discovery vendors argue that the risk of sanctions and negative rulings warrants investment in new technology for proper collection, preservation, review, and production of ESI. But the profession seems to be resistant to the idea that the threat of sanctions is enough to force them to adopt new approaches to discovery. “There seems to be a lot of lawyers being willfully difficult when it comes to production,” says Christine Musil, director of marketing with e-discovery software vendor Informative Graphics. “It seems they aren’t too concerned about sanctions.”

via Law.com – Are E-Discovery Sanctions Tough Enough?.

LegalTech Descends on New York

Lawyers provide legal information to clients and courts of law. The key word is information. With it, we can retain clients, render services, and manage the business of law. And with developments in information technology, we can continually improve our receipt, analysis, and delivery of legal information and account for its costs and remuneration.

With information technology, we can provide better legal services with research tools from the likes of LexisNexis and Westlaw Next and software from e-discovery vendors like Guidance Software, Kroll Ontrack, and StoredIQ that help manage and archive information, as well as cull, produce, and review data for evidence. Transactional lawyers can benefit from document assembly tools and litigators can improve their chances for success with trial technology and internet research. We can also better manage our business with time-and-billing programs, as well as case and matter management applications installed on premise or in the cloud from the likes of Clio and Rocket Matter.

What are the next big improvements in information technology that will benefit lawyers and law firms? Find out at LegalTech New York.

LegalTech brings lawyers, paralegals, law firm administrators, developers, manufacturers, and technologists, and more to the Hilton New York from Feb. 1-3 to share developments and improvements in legal technology, including e-discovery. In 2009, LegalTech New York attracted nearly 13,000 attendees and featured almost 300 exhibiting companies. This year's attendance will be comparable to 2009, says Henry Payne Dicker, vice president of ALM Events, and is ahead in some categories, like paid registrations.

via LegalTech Descends on New York.

The Million-Dollar Words of E-Discovery

Throughout history, humans have had miscommunications and misunderstandings. Some are comical like Abbott and Costello’s “Who’s On First?”; others can be tragic like “Romeo and Juliet.” Most of the time, a misunderstood word here or there doesn’t have far-reaching implications, but in the legal profession a misunderstood word or instruction can cost millions.

In today’s litigious environment, attorneys and IT professionals frequently find themselves in the midst of an e-discovery project that requires the team to quickly find information, which can reside on computers and smartphones, within applications such as e-mail, or on backup tapes stored in the closet of someone’s home. Put these challenges together and the stage is set for expensive, complex, and sometimes frustrating, e-discovery projects.

THE BILLION-DOLLAR MARKET

E-discovery is among the fastest growing segments in the IT industry. Spending for EDD software and services will reach an estimated $1 billion by year-end according to Gartner. A survey of medium-sized U.S. companies conducted by Kroll Ontrack found that, on average, companies will spend $1.29 million to manage electronic data in 2009 compared with $437,000 last year.

[continued] Law.com – The Million-Dollar Words of E-Discovery.