Atos Headquarters Location at Lago Maggiore |
November 29, 2011
CEO Bans Email-Maybe Email Really Is Dead
November 13, 2011
The C-Level Nightmare-Do You Know What You Do Not Know?
Copyright © Cary J. Calderone 2011
This post goes out to all those C-Levels who have not approved pro-active information management and DRED work because, "they can just search and find what they need when they have to." For almost any attorney or e-discovery professional with experience, this cavalier attitude causes a LOL moment. We also call this approach, "head in the sand," or sometimes, "ignorance is bliss...until it's not." After the 9-11 attacks, when the Department of Homeland Security was created, I remember Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, speaking about 3 things: 1) What you know as fact, 2) What you do not know but can research and discover and, 3) What you do not know, you do not know. C-Levels who think they will just find what they need, when they have not tested their approach under the threat of pending litigation, are in the last category. They do not know, what they do not know. Not convinced? Then please consider these items:
Is this your CEO, CTO, or, General Counsel? |
November 4, 2011
Coming to a Law School Near You- eDiscovery Class 101
Professor Rick Marcus |
A few weeks ago, I had the pleasure of attending a Hastings College of the Law alum event where Diane Gibson, a prominent San Francisco litigator with Squire Sanders et al., and UC Hastings Professor Rick Marcus, presented, E-Discovery and Preservation. There was some good DRED news. For an alumnae event, this was very well attended. There were over 100 people who showed up because they were interested in learning about E-Discovery. The bad news was that when Professor Marcus, a principal drafter of the 2006 E-Discovery amendments to the Federal rules, polled the audience to find out who had heard of FRE 502 (critical for protecting privileged material from accidental disclosure) only myself and three others raised their hands. Scary! During the lecture and the Q&A afterword, we heard about many of the interesting E-Discovery and preservation issues, and what the Advisory Committee is considering for future amendments, but for me, the most important item was that Professor Marcus will, for the first time, be teaching Hasting's E-Discovery class in the spring of 2012.
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