In-House Electronic Discovery? NaTIFF™ E-Discovery Server, a service of Global EDD Group

The NaTIFF™ E-Discovery Server is an in-house solution that provides a high level of data control to law firms, corporations and service providers without a high cost of implementation. All data is stored on servers provided by Global EDD Group and administered via secure point-to-point VPN connection with dedicated 24×7 support. Simply attach a data drive to the NaTIFF server and the Global EDD Group team will manage the e-discovery processing based on your direction and specification.

Key Advantages of the NaTIFF E-Discovery Server:

  • Part of the iReviewData suite of electronic discovery services provided by Global EDD Group.
  • Data stays in-house
  • You are in total control of the project
  • Pay-per-Use service with no upfront cost, no minimum contract
  • No need to hire additional manpower for processing and IT infrastructure management
  • Dedicated team is available 24 x 7 to support all your activities

Key Functionality of the NaTIFF E-Discovery Server:

Additional information regarding NaTIFF E-Discovery Servers is available by contacting Brad Mixner, President of Global EDD Group,  here or by clicking to GlobalEDD.com.

Enhanced by Zemanta
LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

European banks see new ATM skimming attacks – Computerworld

Banks in Europe are seeing innovative skimming attacks against ATMs, where fraudsters rig special devices to the cash machines to record payment card details.

Many banks have fitted ATMs with devices that are designed to thwart criminals from attaching skimmers to the machines. But it now appears in some areas that those devices are being successfully removed and then modified for skimming, according to the latest report from the European ATM Security Team (EAST), which collects data on ATM fraud throughout Europe.

Skimming devices are designed to record the account details from the magnetic stripe on the back of a payment card. The data can then be encoded onto a dummy card. A person’s PIN (personal identification number) is often captured with a micro-camera, which was done with the illicitly modified anti-skimming devices, according to the report.

Banks in five countries also reported seeing a new type of skimming device, which uses a modified MP3 player to record card details. It also has a micro-camera to record PINs, according to a photo seen by IDG News Service.

via European banks see new ATM skimming attacks – Computerworld.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

@PSS_Systems thank you for the RT & congrats from the team at Global EDD Group!

@PSS_Systems thank you for the RT & congrats from the team at Global EDD Group!

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

What is Wrong, or Right, with e-Discovery in America? « e-Discovery Team http://bit.ly/bBv9il #ediscovery

What is Wrong, or Right, with e-Discovery in America? « e-Discovery Team http://bit.ly/bBv9il #ediscovery

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Microsoft: virus-infected computers should be quarantined | Technology | guardian.co.uk

Virus-infected computers should be blocked from the internet and kept in quarantine until they are given a “health certificate”, a top Microsoft security researcher suggested on Thursday.

Under the proposed security regime, put forward by the technology giant’s trustworthy computing team, an individual’s internet connection would be “throttled” to prevent the virus spreading to other computers. But security experts today warned that cutting people off from the internet could be a drastic step too far – and that the question of who would issue and verify the “health certificate” was troubling.

Millions of computers around the world running versions of Microsoft’s Windows operating system are infected by viruses without their user’s knowledge and used to generate billions of spam emails and attacks against websites, such as that used against a British law company earlier this month.

The infected computers are often marshalled by virus writers into “botnets” which are hired out for criminal use. Microsoft, internet service providers, banks and web companies have fought long but so far unsuccessful battles against botnets. Earlier this year Microsoft took its fight to the US courts after a group of infected computers sent more than 650m spam emails to its Hotmail accounts. The spread of computer viruses has, however, continued unabated.

The new proposal, Microsoft claimed, is built on the lessons of public health. Scott Charney, corporate vice president of Microsoft’s trustworthy computing team, wrote on the company’s blog: “Just as when an individual who is not vaccinated puts others’ health at risk, computers that are not protected or have been compromised with a bot put others at risk and pose a greater threat to society.”

via Microsoft: virus-infected computers should be quarantined | Technology | guardian.co.uk.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Google Docs Gets Mobile Editing for Android, iPad – Messaging and Collaboration from eWeek

Google Enterprise President Dave Girouard said mobile editing capabilities are coming for Google Docs on Google Android and Apple iPad devices.

Google in the coming weeks will unveil mobile editing functionality for Google Docs running on Google’s Android and Apple’s iPad.

Google Enterprise President Dave Girouard, who noted that Google Apps now has 3 million business customers, said his team demonstrated the tools at the Google Atmosphere cloud computing event in Paris Sept. 20.

Girouard, tasked with leading the company’s cloud collaboration efforts versus Microsoft, IBM and a litany of other players, wrote:

“In the next few weeks, co-workers around the world will soon be able to co-edit files simultaneously from an even wider array of devices.”

Google declined to provide more specific information for eWEEK on this functionality.

via Google Docs Gets Mobile Editing for Android, iPad – Messaging and Collaboration from eWeek.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

DEF CON Hacking Conference: How Safe Is Your Information? | CMS Wire

Wonder how your company would hold up against a team of hackers? At this year’s DEF CON Hacking Conference, held last month, there were some interesting surprises.

Give them 25 Minutes, Your Employees will Offer Valuable Company Information

The conference, which brings together accomplished social engineering hackers, hosts a contest where hackers target 17 major corporations over the course of the two-day event, including Google, Wal-Mart, Symantec, Cisco Systems, Microsoft and Coca-Cola. Contestants sit in plexiglass booths, with an audience watching as they call up company employees, trying to get them to give up information (in 25 minutes or less).

Though contestants aren’t allowed to ask for sensitive information like passwords or social security numbers, they do try to get information that could be misused, like information about what operating system, antivirus software and browser their victims used, as well as trying to get access to unauthorized web pages.

via DEF CON Hacking Conference: How Safe Is Your Information?.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

ECA Thoughts from Legal Tech « SFLegal

In what might be one of the most unfortunate booth placements in recent memory, Nuix was directly across from Clearwell at Legal Tech LA this week. Every time I walked by, the Nuix team was handling a crowd that was oftentimes two or three people deep.

We first looked at Nuix a year or so ago, and while it was powerful and fast, the interface left a great deal to be desired in terms of general “friendliness.” The new interface is much better, but I’d still have a hard time turning attorneys loose on it. At this point, Clearwell owns the advantage in user friendliness, while Nuix (according to their numbers) appears to have the advantage in ingestion and indexing speed.

What will happen next? We may be looking at the next Concordance/Summation situation. It’s likely to be Nuix and Clearwell wrestling for the early case assessment (ECA) higher ground. Whether IPRO and LexisNexis are in an ideal position — or are simply too late — to leapfrog Nuix and Clearwell remains a mystery for now.

via ECA Thoughts from Legal Tech « SFLegal.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

10 Steps to Exclude Illegal Imports | Corporate Counsel

1. Appropriately staff the outside litigation team.

A leanly staffed team possesses concentrated case knowledge, which will improve the quality of the representation and the result of the litigation. In contrast, an overly staffed team possesses diluted case knowledge, which will detrimentally affect the quality of the representation and the result of the litigation.

2. Prepare for trial throughout the case.

In that regard, periodically synthesize the evidence into a comprehensive, understandable and, ultimately, succinct presentation. Unlike in a district or state court trial that may last weeks or months, each party will usually have a week or less to present its case to the ITC administrative law judge.

3. Include an in-house “point person,” such as in-house counsel, as part of the litigation team.

The pre-suit investigation and discovery will be time-consuming and fast-paced and will involve, for example, (a) collecting, reviewing, and producing a significant body of documents and information and (b) identifying and meeting with multiple knowledgeable persons, including employees of the IP owner.

Accordingly, the pre-suit investigation and discovery can be conducted more efficiently and effectively where there is a point person with whom outside counsel can directly interface. Alternatively, having topic-specific point persons may be appropriate.

4. Determine which IP to assert.

Pre-suit, a trade secret owner will determine which trade secret(s) to assert. That determination often will involve, for example, (a) reviewing trade secret source documents, (b) compiling a list of trade secrets to potentially assert, and (c) modifying that list as appropriate.

A trade secret owner should not disclose the asserted trade secret(s) in the ITC complaint because an ITC complaint is typically a publicly available document and a trade secret is to be kept secret.

Similarly, pre-suit, a patent owner will determine which patent(s) to assert. The patent owner must reference the asserted patent claim(s) in the ITC complaint. ITC Rule 210.12(a)(9)(vii).

Where “practicable,” the ITC complaint also is to include a chart comparing each asserted independent patent claim to a representative accused product or process of each accused party, i.e., respondent. ITC Rule 210.12(a)(9)(viii).

5. As part of the pre-suit investigation, investigate as thoroughly as possible other underlying facts and circumstances.

In that regard, ITC litigation is “front-loaded” for an IP owner, i.e., complainant, because: (a) a complainant must have good-faith bases for the allegations in the complaint, (b) the complaint must “[i]nclude a statement of the facts constituting the alleged unfair methods of competition and unfair acts[,]” (c) in a trade secret case, the complaint must “state a specific theory and provide corroborating data to support the allegation(s) in the complaint concerning[, for example,] the existence of a threat or effect to destroy or substantially injure a domestic industry,” and (d) a complainant needs to hit the ground running once the litigation commences. ITC Rules 201.8(e) and 210.12(a)(1), (2), (8).

As to point (d), a complainant knowledgeable about underlying facts and circumstances will more efficiently and effectively engage in discovery and develop its case during the condensed ITC litigation schedule.

[continued] Law.com – 10 Steps to Exclude Illegal Imports.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Microsoft Wins Best Legal Department of 2010 | Corporate Counsel

It was a holiday gift ten years and billions of dollars in the making.

On Dec. 16, 2009, Microsoft Corporation’s legal department settled the company’s longest and most expensive antitrust legal battle. In a major concession to European regulators, the software giant agreed to open its Windows operating system to rival Web browsers.

Microsoft’s general counsel, Brad Smith, and his legal team spent months last year hammering out the details of the 61-page settlement with the European Commission, the European Union’s executive body. By fall, Microsoft’s legal department had held 24 videoconferences and 34 conference calls with E.C. lawyers. “We wanted to be seen as a company that would work with regulators,” said deputy general counsel David Heiner, who heads the antitrust group and led much of the negotiations.

Some have called the settlement one of Smith’s crowning achievements. He and his legal team ended more than a decade of close scrutiny by European regulators. The software colossus can keep doing business across the Atlantic, and the stage is now set for better relations with Brussels. “There could have been an endless succession of slug-it-out battles to the death, and instead Microsoft elected to make some perhaps unwelcome but nonetheless significant concessions,” said Ian Forrester, a partner at White & Case who represented Microsoft in Brussels. The case, he said, is “a really extraordinary piece of legal history.”

The settlement was also symbolic for the company’ s legal team, which has set out to prove that it can resolve disputes amicably, despite Microsoft’s reputation for aggressively fighting legal disputes to their bitter, final end. And much of that effort has focused on building relationships and listening to what the other side wants, and fears. “We have tried to make that a defined part of how we train people to negotiate — in any context,” Smith said. “That is not always successful, but has been widely successful for us.”

Since Smith took the helm of Microsoft’s in-house legal department in 2002, he’s led a campaign to recast his company’s pugnacious image and come to terms with both regulators and Redmond’s fiercest competitors. Last year, for example, along with resolving the Brussels imbroglio, the department helped put together a friendly partnership deal with Yahoo! Inc. after months of acrimonious takeover discussions. The E.C. agreement was the culmination of Smith’s diplomatic offensive.

That’s not to imply that Microsoft has gone all touchy-feely. It remains a formidable legal opponent, especially when it comes to protecting the company’s most valuable asset — its intellectual property. Last year the legal department won two precedent-setting patent defense victories on appeal. Meanwhile, it stopped several consumer lawsuits from getting class certification.

Those litigation successes are among the many reasons we have awarded Microsoft’s lawyers the accolade of Best Legal Department of 2010. It's the fifth time we’ve given out the award, and, as usual, the competition was extremely tight. Corporate Counsel’s writers and editors spent days debating, arguing, and exchanging sometimes heated e-mails. After sending reporters to interview the finalists, we confirmed our ultimate choice.

via Law.com – Microsoft Wins Best Legal Department of 2010.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare