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Video: Enhanced Review Metrics – New Tools to Track Progress and Control Costs in eDiscovery

Nextpoint, Inc., the nation’s leading provider of cloud-based regulatory, compliance, and litigation software, has introduced Enhanced Review Metrics in the Discovery Cloud ™ review platform. Responding to client requests, Nextpoint has deployed more detailed reports and data analysis to eDiscovery reviewers, providing a data-driven, results-oriented review environment for more effective management of eDiscovery projects.

These enhancements are instantly available to all users at no cost thanks to Nextpoint’s cloud-based litigation platform, which shortens the development process and allows for instant user access. When lawyers, project managers, and reviewers log in to the Discovery Cloud document review platform, they can quickly see the progress of their review projects, allowing them to more effectively manage and control the complexity and cost of any eDiscovery effort.

Given the challenges facing litigators trying to manage the discovery of Electronically Stored Information (ESI) in litigation, it is vital that litigators have the most detailed and useful information available about their data. The new analytical tools available in Discovery Cloud offer measurable, results-oriented information regarding the review process, so that Nextpoint customers can control costs and head off complications in eDiscovery.

 

Introducing Discovery Cloud™ Enhanced Review Metrics from Nextpoint on Vimeo.

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Google vows not to sue over certain patents for open source | CNET News (Shara Tibken)

Google today is “taking a stand on open source and patents,” vowing not to sue anyone on specified patents unless first attacked.

The company, which today announced its Open Patent Non-Assertion Pledge, said to start with, it has identified 10 patents related to MapReduce, a model for processing large data sets. It has pledged not to sue any user, distributor, or developer of open-source software based on patents related to MapReduce.

Duane Valz, Google senior patent counsel, said in a blog post that Google wants to ensure open source software remains open:

“At Google we believe that open systems win. Open-source software has been at the root of many innovations in cloud computing, the mobile web, and the Internet generally. And while open platforms have faced growing patent attacks, requiring companies to defensively acquire ever more patents, we remain committed to an open Internet — one that protects real innovation and continues to deliver great products and services.”

via Google vows not to sue over certain patents for open source | Internet & Media – CNET News.

Patent Troll Litigation – Is Legislative Help on the Way? | Dorsey & Whitney

A bill introduced last week with bipartisan support would substantially level the playing field for companies sued for patent infringement by non-practicing entities (NPEs), sometimes called patent trolls. The bill is referred to as the “SHIELD Act,” which stands for the “Saving High-Tech Innovators from Egregious Legal Disputes Act of 2013.”

Companies that have been sued for patent infringement by NPEs appreciate the special problems such litigation presents. The NPE has substantial leverage over the company: Responding to discovery can be very burdensome and disruptive for the company, but not for the NPE, which generally has few documents to produce and perhaps no witnesses; the stakes for the company can be substantial, while the NPE has nothing to lose but its patent; and the company faces potentially large legal bills for defending the patent lawsuit and challenging the validity of even overbroad patents, while the NPE likely has small or no legal bills, because it likely has a contingency fee agreement with its lawyers. To make matters worse, NPEs typically sue an end user of a technology, such as a bank or retailer, which has less incentive and less ability to defend the lawsuit than the company that actually makes the equipment or technology at issue. And finally, the company is likely to be sued in a location like the Eastern District of Texas that is favorable to plaintiffs, convenient to the NPE, but quite inconvenient to the company.

With these leverage imbalances in mind, the NPE typically offers to settle for low six-figure sums, a much smaller figure than the average cost of litigating a patent lawsuit to conclusion. Not surprisingly, companies that are sued by NPEs generally choose to pay rather than litigate. A recent Boston University study estimates that NPEs collected $29 billion in 2011. Further, the number of patent cases brought before the International Trade Commission by NPEs swelled from 22 in 2010 to 232 in 2011.

The SHIELD Act is directed toward entities that buy patents, ostensibly to use them for litigation rather than to make products. Here’s how it works: The SHIELD Act increases the risks for an NPE by requiring an NPE that loses a patent lawsuit (or ITC action) to pay the accused company’s costs, including legal fees, unless the court finds exceptional circumstances that would make such an award unjust. It also makes it more difficult for an NPE to bring a lawsuit by requiring the NPE to post a bond sufficient to cover those costs and fees.

via Patent Troll Litigation – Is Legislative Help on the Way? | News & Events | Dorsey & Whitney.

The Future of Law as Seen From Silicon Valley | Am Law Daily (Aric Press)

What does the future of law practice look like?

It will be user-friendly and accessible via bright and fresh retail shops with the ambiance of Apple stores. It will be data-driven, with litigators turning to enormous databases capable of predicting results and guiding strategy. It will have the charm of an assembly line that parcels work out across time zones and specialties in structured processes certain to warm the hearts of project managers. And it will be beautiful. Imagine strings of case citations rendered as computer-generated graphics as appealing to the eye as they are to the analytical mind.

These were among the compelling visions that emerged last week from a remarkable conference in Silicon Valley. Called ReinventLaw, the daylong meeting featured 40 speakers who described a series of digital, regulatory, and engineering changes that are redefining law as lawyers and their clients now know it.

Two young Michigan State University law professors, Daniel Martin Katz and Renee Newman Knake, organized the session, versions of which are scheduled for London in June and New York in November. At MSU Katz and Knake run the Reinvent Law program, which they call “A Law Laboratory,” a set of classes and experiments devoted to harnessing digital-age technology to the practice of law. This Kauffman Foundation-funded effort rests on a simple concept: “We believe lawyers can change the world but to change the world we must first change ourselves.”

via The Future of Law as Seen From Silicon Valley.

Patent troll litigation – is legislative help on the way? – Lexology (Dorsey & Whitney LLP)

A bill introduced last week with bipartisan support would substantially level the playing field for companies sued for patent infringement by non-practicing entities (NPEs), sometimes called patent trolls. The bill is referred to as the “SHIELD Act,” which stands for the “Saving High-Tech Innovators from Egregious Legal Disputes Act of 2013.”

Companies that have been sued for patent infringement by NPEs appreciate the special problems such litigation presents. The NPE has substantial leverage over the company: Responding to discovery can be very burdensome and disruptive for the company, but not for the NPE, which generally has few documents to produce and perhaps no witnesses; the stakes for the company can be substantial, while the NPE has nothing to lose but its patent; and the company faces potentially large legal bills for defending the patent lawsuit and challenging the validity of even overbroad patents, while the NPE likely has small or no legal bills, because it likely has a contingency fee agreement with its lawyers. To make matters worse, NPEs typically sue an end user of a technology, such as a bank or retailer, which has less incentive and less ability to defend the lawsuit than the company that actually makes the equipment or technology at issue. And finally, the company is likely to be sued in a location like the Eastern District of Texas that is favorable to plaintiffs, convenient to the NPE, but quite inconvenient to the company.

With these leverage imbalances in mind, the NPE typically offers to settle for low six-figure sums, a much smaller figure than the average cost of litigating a patent lawsuit to conclusion. Not surprisingly, companies that are sued by NPEs generally choose to pay rather than litigate. A recent Boston University study estimates that NPEs collected $29 billion in 2011. Further, the number of patent cases brought before the International Trade Commission by NPEs swelled from 22 in 2010 to 232 in 2011.

via Patent troll litigation – is legislative help on the way? – Lexology.