Ediscovery
Court Finds That E-Mail Manipulation Deserves Sanctions Under the New Rule 37(e)
An intellectual property case involving altered emails raised significant issues concerning the reach of newly amended Rule 37(e) of the FRCP.
Decision Finds Washington Courts Rejected Duty to Preserve
In Cook v. Tarbert Logging, the appellate court says Washington courts rejected a general duty to preserve evidence and abused its discretion.
Demystifying the Cloud
Brad Harris, VP of Strategy at Zapproved addresses the benefits of true-saas computing for ediscovery and the five things for look for in a true-SaaS…
Good Faith Efforts to Find Lost Evidence Can Save the Day
In this case, the court ruled that prejudice is required to support spoliation and evidence based on speculative data loss isn’t enough.
Spoliation Claims Require an Actual—Not Imagined—Loss of Evidence
It takes concrete evidence — not mere supposition — to support a claim of spoliation, as a recent case involving a permit dispute illustrates.
Balance in All Things: The Path to Preservation Excellence
Implementation of e-discovery data preservation plans is a function of balancing three resources. Learn what they are.