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Feature Stories Prepare for E-Discovery in Four Easy Steps Identify the Who, What, Where, and When No matter what your level of electronic discovery expertise, gathering the answers to four simple questions—who, what, where, and when—will position you to handle electronic discovery effectively in any case... Electronic Discovery 2003: The Year in Review Wherever you fell on the continuum of electronic discovery acceptance in 2003, you would be wise to hone your electronic discovery knowledge and skills in 2004.... In-House and Outside Counsel Working Together to Prepare for E-Discovery With the establishment of a collaborative relationship between in-house and outside counsel, companies can map out a plan for electronic discovery preparedness... Electronic Discovery: New Challenges, New Opportunities By conveying the benefits and ease-of-use such technology offers, LSMs can bridge the gap for attorneys to embrace electronic discovery sooner rather than later... Best Practices for Preparing Your Company for Electronic Discovery—Advice for In-House Counsel from Leading Attorneys Are you satisfied with your company’s level of preparedness for an electronic document request? Implementing a simple four-step plan will give you a significant strategic advantage when the issue arises... E-Discovery from In-House Counsel's Perspective by contributing author Gary L. Hayden, Ford Motor Company If you have never conducted a large-scale electronic document discovery project, or perhaps have no electronic discovery experience, identifying the right outside resources can be challenging. Here are some of the things you can do to help yourself make an intelligent selection... E-Discovery Best Practices in Antitrust Document Review The Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Competition and the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice have paid increasing attention to electronic discovery practices in the past year, with the FTC including electronic document review as one of the primary topics at its June 2002 merger review "best practices" workshops… Prepare Early and Confer Often—Advice from Federal Experts for Electronic Discovery Practice Parties should no longer be asking whether they have to produce electronic information in discovery, or pleading to the courts that they should not be required to produce information in electronic form. Instead, they should be focused on how to adapt their familiar discovery practices to this new world of discovery… Begin Electronic Discovery Planning Now There is no doubt that electronic discovery is here to stay, and attorneys now need a uniform, well-planned approach for gathering, reviewing, marking and producing electronic discovery documents… |
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