December 25, 2011

The Hills Are Alive With the Sound of E-Discovery???


By Cary J. Calderone, Esquire
Still available on Amazon!
It is the Christmas season.  Those of us involved in DRED Law wish you and yours the happiest of holiday seasons.  Along with many of the more important traditions that occur, this time of year brings television repeats of classic movies like The Sound of Music.  For the past few years, I could not help but think of e-discovery while watching parts of this movie.  Now, I am not obsessed with e-discovery and data law. I promise you.  However, a few scenes from the movie explain in most vivid detail just why the EU has a very different attitude and set of rules towards email and other information that may reveal a user's personal identification.  So, this post is for all of you who are not aware, or, are uncertain as to why the EU Data Protection Act is far more strict and penal in attempting to protect personal privacy at work.  Let's see if these bits of dialogue from the movie validate my point and perhaps give you an idea of who, is to blame.  Take, for example:

Rolf to Lissel when delivering a telegram for Captain Von Trapp- “We make it our business to know everything about everyone.”  
Or, dialogue from Heir Zeller-“You were sent a telegram which you did not answer.  A telegram from Admiral Von Schreiber of the navy of the 3rd Reich.”
Captain Von Trapp “I was under the impression Heir Zeller that the contents of telegrams in Austria are private!  At least the Austria I know.”
The reasons should now be clear.  Once we in America understand the origins of the EU Data Protection Act, it will be easier to put in the systems and policies  necessary to better comply with the rules.  We will follow-up this holiday post in the new year with a more detailed explanation of the EU Data Privacy rules courtesy of a terrific breakout session run by Amor Esteban and William Kellermann.    Until then, if you are frustrated and angry with the challenge of navigating US Data rules and EU Rules at the same time, take heart.  You are not alone.  We can all just blame the Nazis...

Happy Holidays

December 12, 2011

Churchill Club Presents The Big Data Effect

Copyright © 2011  Cary J. Calderone

Is Big Data being over-hyped?  "I certainly hope not" was Ping Li's heartfelt response to moderator Michael Chui's question to the panel (bios below).  Li's firm,  Accel Partners, made a splash in the news recently by announcing the creation of a 100 million dollar fund for investments in Big Data.   The Churchill Club panel members each gave their own interpretations of the Big Data Effect. They emphasized that Big Data was not just about  the volume of data, but how it could be researched, extracted, and analyzed.

December 6, 2011

Big Data-Not Just Big Storage Or It May Be A Big Headache

Copyright © 2011 Cary J. Calderone Esq.

Time to give the busy professional's definition of the latest technology buzz phrase, "Big Data."  In brief, it is about being able to process and mine very large amounts of data (even petabytes) for business intelligence.  Big Data indexing and database technologies, like Hadoop and NoSQL allow for distributed processing that previously was impossible with standard table-based relationship databases.  However, too many short-term thinkers will try to implement a Big Data strategy by doing nothing more than keeping everything they can and figuring it out later.  This approach is fraught with Big danger.