I sat on a three-lawyer panel last month to judge the contestants for America’s greatest e-discovery cases of 2010. Yes, we’ve turned the tables and are judging the judges and their opinions. (Actually, this was a FIOS interview devoted to current case-law, but I’ve been watching too many TV talent shows.) Joining me on the panel was one of my best Jackson Lewis partners in e-discovery, Brett Anders. The third judge was FIOS‘ own tech-law guru, Mary Mack, author of the Sound Evidence blog. We had such a good time judging e-discovery talent this year that we only got half-way through the list of contestants. FIOS was forced to bring us back for another show to finish the judging. This blog represents the shortened, edited version of Americas Got e-Discovery Talent, Part One. Go here for the full Webinar with all its audio glory. It’s free, but you have to register.
Here is the tail end of the introduction of the three-judge panel:
Both Ralph and Brett are working in the employment area. That’s where the rubber meets the road for many of these 2010 cases. It’s where we see the emerging e-discovery trends that we are trying to get our legal-arms around, in the social networking space and those types of things. So what we’re gonna start out with is the first case that came down from the Supreme Court, Quon.
The presentation begins with Brett Anders, and from here on it’s all transcript of webinar highlights (except for my occasional added comments in parenthesis).
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Source: e-discoveryteam.com
By: Ralph Losey
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