Ediscovery Trends
Trends in Ediscovery and Litigation Support
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Clearwell has a post (though not on their own blog), outlining what they project to be the top five ediscovery trends of 2010.
The first is a focus on early case assessment. Right now, smaller ediscovery vendors benefit from law firms’ lack of ECA tools. Once the ESI is collected, firms are going to want to know right away what they have, and whether this data will lead to future litigation. If a litigation support vendor controls this data and has access to a powerful search tool such as Kazeon or Clearwell, this can be done quickly and accurately.
Another imp ortant trend is the growing role that project managers will take on litigation. While lawyers may like to think they know every aspect of a case, the reality is that a good project manager should be able to keep track of what stage litigation is in from an EDRM perspective. Litigation support services and lawyers are going to need to open the channels of communication to effectively manage this vast amount of data and find the needle in the haystack.
We’re not at the point where one ediscovery platform can effectively manage every aspect of litigation. There is still a need for forensic collection, culling, and document review. Currently, there is no litigation software that can handle all of this. However, vendors are able of offer multiple software solutions to fit their clients’ needs. If the amount of ESI collected is small, a vendor can move it to a document review platform right away. For larger collections, a vendor can offer a culling tool. If the data collection itself may become a point of contention, ediscovery vendors will need to employ forensic experts willing to testify before the court.
This last point is especially important when it comes to implementing data from social networking sites into litigation. Facebook and Twitter data is difficult to locate on most hard drives, and care should be taken when it comes to extracting this data. Forensic collection becomes more than just an afterthought in the process.
Litigation support vendors will continue to evolve to meet the needs of clients in 2010. Ediscovery and forensics firms will continue to merge and build symbiotic relationships.
