Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Is Android Really the New Windows? What Does This Mean for International eDiscovery?

Is Android Really the New Windows?  What Does This Mean for International eDiscovery?


Author: Eric Everson, MBA, MSIT-SE, JD Candidate (May 2013)

Technology Analyst David Meyer of ZDNet recently wrote a controversial, yet thought provoking piece dispensing that Android really is the new Windows.  This is a bold pronouncement, which sent the early adopters of tech whirling, some in support and others in utter disagreement.  The controversy stimulated by his article is important as it requires us all to take a hard look at the numbers that the Android is pushing and for those in the practice of law to pivot such that we are more inclusive of Android as a power player in eDiscovery.

The article I’m responding to is one that Mr. Meyer primarily based on a recent Gartner industry report that demonstrates that Android unit sales more than doubled year-on-year to 122.5 million, and the platform has a market share of 72.4 percent, up from 52.5 percent a year before.  Apple's iOS is in second place, with quarterly device sales up from 17.3 million to 23.5 million, but its market share down from 15 percent to 13.8 percent.  Other mobile Operating Systems  (MOPS) are all in the single digits, from RIM's 5.3 percent share down to Microsoft's 2.4 percent.

Perhaps the greatest criticism that Meyer has received is that he has blurred mobile devices with PC’s.  Taking a look at the technology industry as a whole however suggests that the entire industry is also blurring the lines between mobile devices (traditionally home to smartphones and tablets) and PC’s.  Have you seen the Dell XPS Convertible or the Samsung Galaxy Note lately?  Quite simply, the lines are blurred and mobile devices and PC’s are forever changed.

Does this mean we should count Microsoft out of the game?  Not if you recognize the 40 million Windows 8 licenses that Microsoft has already sold (insert Android gulp here) since the new OS debuted just over a month ago.  Microsoft is definitely still in the game and with manufactures ever blurring the lines between PC and tablet, I think it’s still premature to declare Android the new Windows just yet. 

For eDiscovery vendors, digital forensic specialists, data analysts, and technology attorneys alike, the expansion of Android means that our world is growing.  As the facts indicate, data is growing at an astonishing pace; to facilitate the future of litigation, we have to ensure that we too keep pace with the growth.  As the facts demonstrate, the lines between mobile devices and computing are forever blurred, as such the role of eDiscovery in litigation continues to multiply.         

#eDiscovery #mobile #techlaw

Are you on Twitter?  Follow me @IntleDiscovery or @iamtechlaw

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About the Author:  Eric Everson is a 3L law student at Florida A&M University – College of Law where he will graduate in May 2013.  Prior to law school he earned an MBA and Masters in Software Engineering while working within the U.S. telecommunications industry.  The views and opinions presented in this blog are his own and are not to be construed as legal advice.  Eric Everson currently serves on the Board of Governors for The Florida Bar Young Lawyers Division Law Student Division and is the President of the Electronic Discovery Law Student Association at Florida A&M University – College of Law.  Follow: @IntleDiscovery or @iamtechlaw

Tags:  mESI, Mobile eDiscovery, Mobile Device eDiscovery, Android, Windows, Windows 8 eDiscovery, Tablet eDiscovery, Android eDiscovery, ZDNet, MOPS, PC, iOS, iamtechlaw   

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

In-House eDiscovery and Data Preservation: Litigation Hold, Where is Your Data?

In-House eDiscovery and Data Preservation: Litigation Hold, Where is Your Data?


Author: Eric Everson, MBA, MSIT-SE, J.D. Candidate May 2013

Perhaps the most frightening phrase in-house counsel can hear today is “litigation hold.”  Where do you start? Who do you call? How do you preserve all of the data? How will this impact operations? … before you go into full blown meltdown, let’s start with the most important question first: Where is your data?
 

When approaching a litigation hold, understand that data management is a profession within its own right.  In an age where data fragmentation and cloud computing can quite literally have data scattered methodically all around the world, the first step in complying with a litigation hold is understanding where the data actually is.  This is likely to result in a different answer every time you encounter it, so take the time to understand your data and its location at the frontend of each litigation hold.  To best understand where your data is, you should start by seeking answers these core questions:    

Who manages the data?  This will be different for all organizations.  Some organizations may have a smaller IT team that handles all matters of data storage and archiving whereas, other Big Data companies may have entire business units or third-party service providers that help manage the data.  It is important to identify who “owns” or otherwise has the principle responsibility for the data that is the subject of your litigation hold.  Finding this person or team can be a process, but often nothing beats some old fashion telephone calls.  As a matter of developing credibility within your IT organization, I recommend contacting your local IT personnel first and working through contacts by way of internal referral.  This will get you more acclimated to the IT lingo and will help you the next time you have a litigation hold too… there will always be a next time. 

What data is to be included in the hold?  The biggest mistake in-house counsel can make is overreacting to a litigation hold.  Remember that the best defense A litigation hold does not validate you standing atop the desk declaring “Stop the Presses!”  Be cognizant that what you are seeking 99% of the time when processing a litigation hold is considered archive data (as compared with real time data).  This means that you never need to bring operations to a screeching halt, but rather must identify the data with a degree of particularity that is the actual subject of the litigation hold.  Know what you are seeking.  This means familiarizing yourself with more techie lingo like file types, indexing, and often understanding your Database Management System (DBMS).  This will all help you in exploring your preservation options and will help you hone in on where the data is actually located.      

Where is the data actually located?  Don’t get frustrated when personnel from IT makes a statement like, “The data is everywhere man.” or “Dude, it’s somewhere in the cloud.”  As frustrating as this may be as in-house counsel, this may be a very accurate statement depending on the physical structure you are facing in your company’s data management.  In fact, it may be a very telling observation for instance, if your company is using distributed data centers and applies a data fragmentation strategy to better protect the data.  What you need to ultimately get to, is where the data is physically located.  The data will be easy enough to identify by its IP address (which is essentially like saying its digital location) but it is best if you can drill deeper and identify down to the physical building, rack, and shelf that the physically stores the data.  Knowing where you data is will help you better manage its preservation.

Now that you have answered these core questions, you are on your way to better executing the litigation hold.  A litigation hold is not something to take lightly, but if systematically approached each time it can be a much less overwhelming process.  To improve this process looking forward, you may also seek to implement a data management policy that outlines defensible systematic data archiving and removal protocols.

 

 #eDiscovery

Are you on Twitter?  Follow me @IntleDiscovery

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About the Author:  Eric Everson is a 3L law student at Florida A&M University – College of Law where he will graduate in May 2013.  Prior to law school he earned an MBA and Masters in Software Engineering while working within the U.S. telecommunications industry.  The views and opinions presented in this blog are his own and are not to be construed as legal advice.  As a software engineer, turned law student, Eric Everson currently serves on the Board of Governors for The Florida Bar Young Lawyers Division Law Student Division and is the President of the Electronic Discovery Law Student Association at Florida A&M University – College of Law.  Follow @IntleDiscovery        

Tags:  Preservation, Litigation Hold, Data, Data Center, DBMS, eDiscovery, Data Storage, Big Data, eDisclosure, in-house counsel, data fragmentation, Archive, File type, technology law, Eric Everson    

 

 

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Fender Guitars Plugs-in with Apple: Are Your Guitar Chords Discoverable?

Fender Guitars Plugs-in with Apple: Are Your Guitar Chords Discoverable?


Author: Eric Everson, MBA, MSIT-SE, J.D. Candidate May 2013

The coveted icon of music industry guitars, Fender, unveiled its latest foray into technology today.  The guitar company has officially announced a new model that comes with the ability to connect directly to iOS devices like the iPad and iPhone (and of course Mac computers) via USB.

 

With eyes on the future of the intersection of copyright law and technology law, does this innovation mean that guitar chords will become discoverable by virtue of eDiscovery?  eDiscovery refers to an area of litigation where electronically stored information (ESI) enters the legal process.  Imagine the scenario where two artists are battling out who the first author of the song was and it becomes immediately apparent how metadata (data about data which often includes information such as the author, creation date, time stamp, etc.) regarding the chord patterns could be legally relevant.  Perhaps only the future will tell, but this union between Fender and Apple certainly strikes a chord!

As PC Mag notes, “Ever since the debut of the iPad, third-party accessory makers have worked to produce a wide range of add-ons and gadgets designed to allow musicians to take their studio sessions mobile. From specialized adapter cords to cleverly constructed interface jacks, in recent years the professional music community has become accustomed to using these devices to record sessions directly to the iPad and iPhone. Now, at least in the case of guitar players looking to go digital, the new Fender instrument essentially eliminates the need for many of these clunky accessories.” (Ref: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2412051,00.asp)  With the ubiquity of the iPad in the deepest recesses of the professional music community, it seems that the likelihood of such data becoming part of litigation is but only a matter of time.

In the immortal words of Foreigner’s Jukebox Hero, “And that one guitar made his whole life change.”

#eDiscovery

Are you on Twitter?  Follow me @IntleDiscovery

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About the Author:  Eric Everson is a 3L law student at Florida A&M University – College of Law where he will graduate in May 2013.  Prior to law school he earned an MBA and Masters in Software Engineering while working within the U.S. telecommunications industry.  The views and opinions presented in this blog are his own and are not to be construed as legal advice.  Eric Everson currently serves on the Board of Governors for The Florida Bar Young Lawyers Division Law Student Division and is the President of the Electronic Discovery Law Student Association at Florida A&M University – College of Law.  Follow @IntleDiscovery        

Tags:  Fender, Fender Guitars, Apple, iPad, eDiscovery, eDisclosure, Copyright, Law, Tech Law, Technology Law, Preservation, ESI, Electronically Stored Information, Music Law, Entertainment Law   

Monday, November 12, 2012

eDiscovery in U.S. Federal Court: What ArrivalStar Means to You.

eDiscovery in U.S. Federal Court: What ArrivalStar Means to You.

Author: Eric Everson, MBA, MSIT-SE, J.D. Candidate May 2013


The thing I hear the most from attorneys is how complex and complicated eDiscovery is making litigation.  The truth is that eDiscovery can be both complex and complicated, however many courts and jurisdictions all over the world are working through it every day.  One such example via an Amended Order (2012 WL 3590414) that hails from Judge Allegra is one of special import for those facing eDiscovery in U.S. Federal Court: ArrivalStar S.A. v. The United States of America (2012 WL 3590414).

This Amended Order published August 20, 2012, irons out some very fundamental aspects of eDiscovery for litigants in U.S. Federal Courts by way of 15 key points:

1. This Order supplements this court's discovery rules.

2. Generally, the costs of discovery shall be borne by each party, subject to the provisions of RCFC 26(b)(2)(B) and 37.

3. Production requests under RCFC 34 and 45 involving electronically stored information (ESI) shall not include metadata absent a showing of good cause (e.g., that questions exist concerning the authenticity or authorship of email). (Emphasis added)

4. Email production request shall only be propounded for specific issues, rather than general discovery of a product or business. Subject to paragraph 3, the production of email shall not include metadata so long as the following information fields are otherwise apparent: date sent, to, from, cc, and any attached filed(s).

5. Email production requests shall be phased to occur after the parties have exchanged initial disclosures and basic documentation about the patents, the prior art, the accused instrumentalities, the relevant finances, as well as the technology systems involved with email that is reasonably anticipated to be relevant. While this provision does not require the production of such information, the court encourages prompt and early production of this information to promote efficient and economical streamlining of the case.

6. Email production requests shall identify the custodian, search terms, and time frame. The parties shall cooperate to identify the proper custodians, proper search terms, and time frame.

7. Each requesting party shall limit its email production requests to a total of eight custodians per producing party. The parties may jointly agree to modify this limit without the court's leave. The court shall consider contested requests for additional custodians, upon showing a distinct need based on the size, complexity, and issues of this specific case.

8. Each requesting party shall limit its email production requests to a total of ten search terms per custodian per party. The parties may jointly agree to modify this limit without the court's leave. The court shall consider contested requests for additional search terms per custodian, upon showing a distinct need based on the size, complexity, and issues of this case. The search terms shall be narrowly tailored to particular issues. Indiscriminate terms, such as the producing company's name or its product name, are inappropriate unless combined with narrowing search criteria that sufficiently reduce the risk of overproduction. A conjunctive combination of multiple words or phrases (e.g., “computer” and “system”) narrows the search and shall count as a single search term. A disjunctive combination of multiple words or phrases (e.g., “computer” or “system”) broadens the search, and thus each word or phrase shall count as a separate search term unless they are variants of the same word. Use of narrowing search criteria (e.g., “and,” “but not,” “w/x”) is encouraged to limit the production.

9. Before seeking to modify the limits specified in paragraphs 7 or 8, the parties are encouraged to engage in sampling under RCFC 26(b) and 34(a)(1)(A).

10. Pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 502, the production of documents and data pursuant to this Order shall not result in the waiver of the attorney-client privilege or work-production protection as to those documents and data. Also, the production of privileged or protected documents or data under this Order shall not result in the waiver of the attorney-client privilege or work-product protection as to those documents and data in any other federal or state proceeding.

11. If the producing party determines that it has produced a document or data to which it wishes to assert a claim of privilege or protection, the counsel for the producing party shall notify the recipient promptly of its claim. As part of the notification, the producing party's counsel shall identify, by Bates number(s), the document(s) as to which the producing party is asserting a claim of privilege or protection.

12. The recipient shall notify the producing party's counsel upon identification of any document(s) or data which appears to be potentially privileged or protected. Such notification shall not waive the recipient's ability to challenge any assertion of privilege or protection made by the producing party as to the identified document(s). As part of the notification, the recipient shall identify, by Bates Number(s), the document(s) or data at issue. The recipient shall segregate the specified document(s) or data, as well as any copies thereof, from the other materials, and the recipient shall not use the information in the potentially privileged or protected document(s) or date, except as provided by RCFC 26(b)(5)(B), for a period of 14 days after the date on which the recipient notifies the producing party's counsel. Within the 14–day period, or any other period of time agreed to by the parties, the producing party shall determine whether it will assert a claim of privilege or protection as to the identified document(s), and its counsel shall notify the recipient of its determination.

13. Upon receiving notice of a claim of privilege or protection by the producing party regarding a produced document or data, the recipient shall segregate, with promptness and in accordance with RCFC 26(b)(5)(B), the specified document or data, as well as any copies thereof, and the recipient shall not use the information in the specified document or data, except as provided by RCFC 26(b)(5)(B), until after the claim is resolved. If the court upholds—or if the recipient does not challenge—the producing party's claim or privilege as to the produced document or data, the recipient shall return or dispose of the specified document or date, as well as any copies thereof.

13. The parties agree to exchange ESI in accordance with the following provisions. All ESI will be produced either in their native file format or in PDF or TIFF format according to the preference of the producing party except that in the case of ESI for which the native file format is Microsoft Office Excel or other spreadsheet software (e.g., Lotus 123 or Quattro Pro), such ESI shall be produced in its native file format. In producing ESI PDF or TIFF format, however, the producing party shall not remove or reduce any word searching capabilities present in the underlying ESI's native file format. The parties may, by agreement, modify the formats prescribed by this paragraph.

15. This Order may be modified by the court for good cause. The court will be inclined to grant any modification jointly proposed by the parties.

Footnote: The order contains some of, but not all, the provisions from the Model Order drafted by the E–Discovery Committee of the Federal Circuit Advisory Council. See http://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/images/stories/the-court/Ediscovery_Model_Order.pdf  The court also considered the Model Order drafted by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas on this subject, see http://www.txed.uscourts.gov/page1.shtmil? location=rules, as well as recent commentary on this subject, see Daniel Garrie, “The E–Discovery Dance for Patents: Changing the Tune,” http://www.law360.com/articl es/350842/the-e-discovery-dance-for-patentschanging-the-tune.

I know that for some, posting all 15 of these key points only further muddies the water, but for others it likely brings some clarity.  If nothing else, ArrivalStar gives you a place to start from when facing eDiscovery in Federal litigation.  I added emphasis to number 3, as it carves out an exception against providing metadata on RCFC 34 (ESI) and 45 (Subpoenas) requests.  The flag of caution that I would raise here is in producing ESI in something other than native format.  When it comes to today’s eDiscovery software, native format is king and to accept anything less, is a litigation decision that only you can make for yourself.

eDiscovery is here to stay, so little gems like ArrivalStar help to resolve some of the sticky issues therein.  It is important when working through matters of eDiscovery to understand what you are agreeing to and what impact that may have on your case.  While many cases will not turn on metadata, understand that there will be those exceptions where the metadata says it all.

#eDiscovery

Are you on Twitter?  Follow me @IntleDiscovery

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About the Author:  Eric Everson is a 3L law student at Florida A&M University – College of Law where he will graduate in May 2013.  Prior to law school he earned an MBA and Masters in Software Engineering while working within the U.S. telecommunications industry.  The views and opinions presented in this blog are his own and are not to be construed as legal advice.  Eric Everson currently serves on the Board of Governors for The Florida Bar Young Lawyers Division Law Student Division and is the President of the Electronic Discovery Law Student Association at Florida A&M University – College of Law.  Follow @IntleDiscovery        

Tags:  ArrivalStar, eDiscovery, Discovery Agreements, Clawback, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Legal Hold, ESI, Patent Law, Technology Law, modified file formats, TIFF, PDF, .XLSX, RCFC 26, Privilege