Oregon State Bar Bulletin NOVEMBER 2007 |
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Last December’s revisions to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, addressing discovery of electronically stored information, underscored the fact that no lawyer today can afford to ignore e-discovery. No matter the case, no matter the court, digital data is likely to be implicated.
That means lawyers urgently need to understand e-discovery and keep abreast of developments in the field. In this month’s column, the first of two parts on e-discovery, we look at some of the more useful websites for learning about and keeping current with this essential area of practice. Next month, in part two, we will survey blogs about e-discovery and look at some vendors’ sites that include useful resources.
Getting Started
For all it offers, www.discoveryresources.org, may be the leading e-discovery
portal. Even though the site is sponsored by e-discovery company Fios, it foregoes
commerce in deference to its mission, which is to provide news, information
and resources about e-discovery. Through both original content and outside
links, Discovery Resources provides timely news stories, substantive articles,
tutorials, seminars, podcasts, legal forms and other tools.
Another useful entry point to resources on e-discovery is the American Bar Association’s Legal Technology Resource Center, www.abanet.org/tech/ltrc/. The site devotes a section to courtroom technology and, within that, a guide to e-discovery resources. Although not extensive, the guide is a good starting point.
If you want to know what federal judges know about e-discovery, you will find no better source than Ken Withers at www.kenwithers.com. In his role as education attorney for the Federal Judicial Center, Withers teaches judges about e-discovery and technology. His personal site archives his many articles and presentations, discusses e-discovery rulemaking, and provides links to e-discovery resources elsewhere on the Web.
California lawyer Richard E. Best started posting his civil discovery outlines on the Web in 1999, and has continued to update them ever since at California Civil Discovery Law, http://californiadiscovery.findlaw.com. From his home page, follow the "electronic data" link for his extensive collection of resources covering state and federal e-discovery, as well as related issues such as e-discovery ethics.
The Electronic Evidence Information Center, www.e-evidence.info, is a fairly modest collection of links to resources and conferences relating to e-discovery and computer forensics. Worth noting is the site’s page collecting links to mobile phone forensics tools.
Research and Practices
The rapid growth of e-discovery in recent years has left the horse often trailing
the cart. A number of organizations are now working to develop standards
and practices with the goal of harmonizing e-discovery across courts and
industries.
A leader in this research is the Sedona Conference, a non-profit organization devoted to innovation in antitrust law, complex litigation and intellectual property law. It has devoted substantial work to the establishment of best practices in e-discovery. In June 2007, it released the second edition of The Sedona Principles on e-discovery. This document and many others are available through the Sedona site at www.sedonaconference.org.
Given its goal of enhancing the administration of justice, the National Center for State Courts is immersed in issues surrounding e-discovery in state courts. In August 2006, it published an extensive set of e-discovery guidelines for state trial courts, which is available as a download from its site at www.ncsconline.org. Elsewhere, the site compiles research and resources on e-discovery and houses a variety of articles on the topic.
Directed by legal technology consultant, writer and speaker Tom O’Connor, the Legal Electronic Document Institute, www.legal-edocs.org, is a non-profit organization devoted to the development of education and standards related to legal electronic documents. Its website’s areas of focus include practice management, electronic trial practice and litigation support, e-filing, e-signatures and e-discovery.
Similarly, the Electronic Discovery Institute, www.ediscoveryinstitute.org, describes itself as a public-interest organization conducting research into the efficacy of various methods of e-discovery. According to the site, the institute’s inaugural study is underway, testing the reliability of search and retrieval technology. Once completed, the study will be published here.
While the foregoing entities focus on e-discovery practices, Socha Consulting, www.sochaconsulting.com, takes a different tack with its annual Socha-Gelbmann Electronic Discovery Survey. Think of it as the Consumer Reports of e-discovery vendors. The survey ranks the top e-discovery companies and provides information on many others. The full survey is pricey — $5,000 for 2007 — but a free summary was published in the August Law Technology News. Socha’s site includes various free resources as well.
From the publishers of the Socha-Gelbmann survey comes this related site, The Electronic Discovery Reference Model, www.edrm.net. The site originally was devoted to development of a model set of standards and guidelines governing e-discovery. With the model now in place and in the public domain, the site focuses on its deployment.
EDDix, http://eddixllc.com, is a company devoted to research, analysis and reporting on e-discovery. The "ix" in its name stands for "information exchange." Through this site, EDDix sells various publications containing its research and also provides links to news and resources relating to e-discovery.
Reading Up on E-Discovery
A number of sites house original news stories, practice pieces, white papers,
seminar presentations and other materials devoted to e-discovery.
Law.com’s Legal Technology Center, for example, maintains a useful section devoted to electronic data discovery, www.law.com/jsp/legaltechnology/edd.jsp. It features news articles and expert commentary written for the site and drawn from legal newspapers and magazines. An "E-Discovery Roadmap" lets you navigate your way through steps in the e-discovery process and learn about their requirements and best practices.
Craig Ball, www.craigball.com, is a board-certified trial lawyer and a certified forensic examiner, a combination that uniquely qualifies him as an e-discovery consultant and prolific writer on e-discovery and computer forensics. His website collects his regular column together with a variety of his articles and presentations.
LLRX.com, www.llrx.com, has long been a superior site for articles and resources on law technology and practice. From its main page, click on "E-Discovery" in the right-hand navigation column or use the site’s search feature to find a library of articles and updates covering e-discovery.
A collection of e-discovery materials from the Federal Judicial Center, www.fjc.gov, can be found by following the "materials on electronic discovery" link from its front page. The collection focuses on civil litigation and includes FJC workshop and seminar materials, research and publications, along with links to selected external materials. A link points to a separate page of materials focused on search and seizure of electronic data in criminal cases.
FindLaw’s Electronic Discovery Center, http://technology.findlaw.com/electronic-discovery/, provides substantive articles and white papers on e-discovery along with vendor press releases. An "E-Discovery Wizard" provides checklists and links to articles regarding specific provisions of the federal rules.
Law Journal Newsletters, a division of ALM, publishes the newsletter E-Discovery Law & Strategy, which can be reached through www.lawjournalnewsletters.com. Subscribers can view the full text of articles as well as download the entire newsletter in PDF. Nonsubscribers can view article summaries and purchase individual articles.
Michael Arkfeld’s book, Electronic Discovery and Evidence, is a leading treatise on e-discovery. The book is available for purchase through Law Partner Publishing, www.lawpartnerpublishing.com. Purchasers get password access to Web-only resources available here, including updates, forms and checklists.
A unique e-discovery resource is the Litigation Support Vendors Association, www.lsva.com. This site is home to multiple, free discussion forums covering such topics as e-discovery, computer forensics and best practices. All are moderated by industry experts and representatives of legal-technology companies. Also posted on the site are jobs within the litigation support industry.
Next month: Our review of e-discovery sites continues with
a survey of blogs on the topic and a look at the sites of some e-discovery
vendors.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Robert Ambrogi, who practices law in Rockport, Mass., is the former editor
of National Law Journal and Lawyers Weekly USA. He is internationally known
for his writing about the Internet and technology..
© 2007 Robert Ambrogi