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Ball in your Court

~ Musings on e-discovery & forensics.

Ball in your Court

Category Archives: E-Discovery

A Brief Compendium of Boneheaded E-Discovery Mistakes

18 Sunday Dec 2011

Posted by craigball in E-Discovery

≈ 17 Comments

Earlier this year, I delivered the keynote address for a corporate event in Canada,  I called the talk, “Spoiled and Deluded: Ugly Truths about Electronic Search.”  I lamented how our happy experience with Google and online legal research has left us woefully unprepared (“spoiled”) for the extreme difficulty of search in e-discovery, then dashed a few misconceptions about the efficacy of searching ESI in accepted ways (“deluded”).  Dear Reader, we need to be brutally frank about search; because in a world where the organization of information has gone the way of the typewriter and file room, effective, efficient search is something we cannot manage without.

Search has two non-exclusive ways to fail: your query will not retrieve the information you seek and your query will retrieve information you weren’t seeking.  The measure of the first is called “recall,” and of the latter, “precision.”  We want what we’re looking for (high recall) and only what we are looking for (high precision).

Recall and Precision aren’t friends.  In e-discovery, they’re barely on speaking terms.  Every time Recall has a tea party, Precision crashes with his biker buddies and breaks the dishes. Continue reading →

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A Fish Story

11 Sunday Dec 2011

Posted by craigball in E-Discovery

≈ 3 Comments

There was an old farmer who always took the trophy in the fishing tournament with the biggest catch.  The new game warden became suspicious and demanded the farmer take him fishing.  In the middle of the lake, the farmer pulls out a stick of dynamite, lights it and throws it into the water.  Boom!  When hundreds of stunned fish float to the surface, the farmer takes out a net and snags the biggest one.  The warden is outraged.  “You can’t do that!” he screams, “Do you know how many laws you’ve broken?”  Calmly, the farmer lights another stick of dynamite, hands it to the game warden and says, “Well boy, you gonna talk or you gonna fish?”

Litigants look to lawyers for guidance in preserving electronic evidence, and lawyers, clueless about information technology, hand them a stick of dynamite and say, “go fish.” Continue reading →

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A Marvelous Birthday Present for the E-Discovery Community

01 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by craigball in Computer Forensics, E-Discovery

≈ 9 Comments

Today, December 1, 2011, marks the fifth “birthday” of the federal e-discovery rules amendments. Five is the age when we leave the idle idylls of early childhood and take our first steps on the road to becoming a skilled, educated and productive adult. Five years out from the rules amendments, we’ve yet to see the legal community embrace the ABCs of e-discovery.  Educational resources remain sparse and superficial. Worse, many lawyers cling to the delusion that they can be competent advocates without understanding digital evidence in a world where nearly all evidence is digital. Most lawyers lack any training or tools to examine, sort or search electronically stored information.  Lawyers have lost touch with evidence.

Birthdays and gifts go together, and I can’t imagine a better or more timely “gift” to the e-discovery community than the introduction of a spectacularly powerful software tool called Proof Finder.  For the breakthrough price of $100 dedicated entirely to supporting child literacy, purchasers of Proof Finder will snag a tool having the core capabilities of e-discovery platforms costing thousands of dollars more.  It’s a tool with the power and price tag to get lawyers back in touch with evidence. Continue reading →

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Imagining the Evidence

26 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by craigball in Computer Forensics, E-Discovery

≈ 2 Comments

Whether you call it “predictive coding” or “technology assisted search,” the time is nigh when we will leave much of the heavy lifting of search to machines trained to find responsive documents. These tools won’t be the heuristic marvels like HAL-9000 envisioned by Arthur C. Clarke, but they probably won’t try to kill us either.

We’ll train these tools by presenting them with examples of patently responsive documents culled by flesh-and-blood reviewers from key custodians’ ESI. Using sophisticated algorithms that analyze these “seed sets” and identify patterns, the tools will ferret out other documents like the examples. Because we can train the tools to find similar ESI using any documents, we won’t be relegated to using seed sets derived from actual documents. We can train the tools with contrived documents–fabrications of items like the genuine counterparts we hope to find. I call this “imagining the evidence,” and it’s not nearly as crazy as it sounds.

Continue reading →

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Should a Legal Hold “Waiver” Be Secured from Departing Employees?

19 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by craigball in E-Discovery

≈ 3 Comments

While my wife trims the tree this lazy Saturday, I’m enjoying splendid articles by Mark Sidoti, chair of the Gibbons E-Discovery Task Force.  That job title gave me brief pause.  Oh, no! Have e-discovery costs driven corporations to outsource review to a shrewdness of arboreal apes?  As it turns out, Gibbons is a 230-lawyer firm in and around New Jersey (and, yes, a group of apes is really called a “shrewdness of apes.”  Don’t you just love the idiosyncracies of the English language?).

Sidoti’s EDD articles can be found on his bio page.  One of these discusses the decision in NVE, Inc. v. Palmeroni, where Judge Esther Salas (USDC DNJ) sanctioned the plaintiff for failing to take reasonable steps to preserve relevant ESI pertaining to  alleged breach of fiduciary duty by its former employee, Palmeroni.  The Court determined that the plaintiff’s obligation to preserve arose when it terminated Mr. Palmeroni’s employment–a time when, the court notes, “litigation was imminent.” Continue reading →

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Agatha, Hercule, Mummy and Me

14 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by craigball in E-Discovery

≈ 2 Comments

Three weeks ago, skulking around the mummies in a small-but-fine museum on the University of Sydney campus, I learnt that mystery writer Agatha Christie was married to archaeologist, Max Mallowan, and that she’d assisted him in Syrian digs.  Dame Agatha even used her cold cream and knitting needles to clean rare ivory artifacts.  The experience found its way into her work.  An exhibit of Christie-cleaned carvings included a quote from the author’s fictional detective, Hercule Poirot, in Death on the Nile (1937):

Once I went professionally to an archaeological expedition–and I learnt something there.  In the course of an excavation, when something comes up out of the ground, everything is cleared away very carefully all around it.  You take away the loose earth, and you scrape here and there with a knife until finally your object is there, all alone, ready to be drawn and photographed with no extraneous matter confusing it. That is what I have been seeking to do–clear away the extraneous matter so that we can see the truth–the naked shining truth.

This naturally got me thinking about the way we approach search in electronic discovery.  Continue reading →

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A Good Decision Brings Out the Bullies

14 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by craigball in E-Discovery

≈ 5 Comments

I don’t know U.S. Magistrate Judge James L. Cott of the Southern District of New York.  I couldn’t even find a photo of him save the one at left singing with the Harvard Krokodiloes circa 1978.  But Judge Cott has my admiration and sympathy for a good decision that’s under attack by well-funded business interests who’ve picked the wrong case to rally their troops.

The truth is, in Pippins v. KPMG, it was KPMG’s poor presentation of the issues and evidence (ironic, as they’re one of the biggest e-discovery vendors in the trade) that left Judge Cott no option but to rule as he did–and surely the smart folks hired to condemn the decision know that.  But that’s not stopping the rush to pillory the magistrate.  One big firm commentator even called the result “stupid.” That’s just mean.

What really ticks off the big firm bar and Chamber of Commerce lobby is the fact the  judge didn’t simply rule and slink away.  No, His Honor had the temerity to explain why he couldn’t just incant “proportionality” and miraculously gloss over the glaring absence of factual and legal justification to support KPMG’s request to discard evidence. Continue reading →

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Down Under

25 Tuesday Oct 2011

Posted by craigball in Computer Forensics, E-Discovery, General Technology Posts, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Down Under

Dear Reader,

I’ve been in Australia for a couple of weeks, at an e-discovery conference in Sydney and traveling to see this beautiful and engaging country. Please forgive the paucity of posts while I’m enjoying the land down under.

Sydney may be the most beautiful city I’ve ever seen, and save for a few in South America and South Africa, I’ve seen most of them. Having fabulous weather and generous hosts helped, but all the Sydneysiders we met were friendly and helpful. Nuix mounted a heck of a great users’ conference that encouraged a lot of advanced thinking about the direction of EDD. There aren’t enough superlatives to do the event justice. Peter Mercer of Vound Software kindly shared a day showing my wife and me the glorious northern beaches most tourists never see. So many kindnesses shared by friends and strangers.

The Blue Mountains (two hours west of Sydney) and the Great Ocean Road (southwest of Melbourne) are extraordinarily beautiful, rivaling any vistas, anywhere. Yes it’s expensive to visit Australia right now, and it’s a long flight, but it’s well worth every penny and every hour. My only regret is that I didn’t get here sooner!

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Do We Need a Porn Pass?

01 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by craigball in Computer Forensics, E-Discovery

≈ Comments Off on Do We Need a Porn Pass?

Ah, porn.  The fabric free entertainment that folks just won’t leave at home.  In his concurring opinion in Jacobellis v. Ohio 378 U.S. 184 (1964), Justice Potter Stewart famously said of hardcore pornography, “I know it when I see it.”  If Justice Stewart had practiced in the era of e-discovery, he’d know it well indeed.

Forensic examiners joke that porn is a perk of the job because we come across it so often on workplace systems, mainly in e-mail.  Most is softcore stuff or cheesecake shared more for humor than titillation; but some can be pretty raw.  It can be tortious, as well…and when subjects skew too young, a felony.

Workplace porn is a problem, perhaps nowhere more so than when it’s inadvertently produced to the other side in e-discovery.  You may wonder, “Does that really happen?”  Let me assure you it occurs with astonishing regularity; and I expect it to happen more as we trade human review for mechanized categorization techniques like predictive coding.  Say what you will about bored contract reviewers, pictures of naked folks afrolic tend to catch their eye.  Not so machines…unless tasked to look for skin tones, and even then baby pictures pass for ‘oh baby’ pictures.

As I sit here shaking my head at a production set where porn crossed over, I ask you dear reader: Do we need a porn pass?

Continue reading →

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A Changing Definition of Deletion

30 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by craigball in Computer Forensics, E-Discovery

≈ Comments Off on A Changing Definition of Deletion

They’re talking about changing the federal e-discovery rules to lessen the fear and loathing attendant to preservation of ESI.

The unstated impetus is that federal judges can’t be trusted to weigh preservation and mete out sanctions in ways fairly attuned to facts and culpability. The proposed amendments seek to wrest the gavels from cranky judges whose 20/20 hindsight and outsize expectations operate to impose an impossible, perilous standard nationwide.  Or so goes the rhetoric.

It’s a crock.  We give federal judges a job for life, but can’t trust them to do that job wisely and well?!?  Did we not learn anything from the debacle of mandatory sentencing guidelines?

The proposed changes are driven by the second silent goal of sparing litigants (really their technologically challenged counsel) the chore of knowing enough about electronic evidence and information technology to make defensible decisions about preservation.  “Don’t make us learn anything,” they plead, “just make rules specific enough to protect us from not knowing.” The rub with grafting such specificity onto e-discovery is that information technology moves far more swiftly than rule making, such that amendments like those proposed principally benefit those who can’t or won’t keep up. Continue reading →

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