Litigators
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Litigation Finance, Litigators, Money, Technology
alt.legal: If Money is Speech, Then Crowdfund Your Favorite Public Interest Lawsuit
A new venture offers citizens, lawyers and non-lawyers alike, a way to participate in important courtroom battles.
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Biglaw, Litigators, Sponsored Content
New Book Answers Questions about TAR
Hot off the digital press: a new, complimentary e-book from Catalyst that answers questions about technology assisted review. Ask Catalyst: A User’s Guide to TAR, provides detailed answers to 20 basic and advanced questions about how to use AI-enhanced document review in e-discovery and investigations. Download your free copy now.
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Biglaw, Litigators, Sponsored Content
How Not To Mess Up A Litigation Hold
If there’s an E-Discovery 101 textbook out there somewhere, then one of the first lessons is probably legal holds.
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This Week In Legal Tech: Rating Lawyers By Their Wins And Losses
Win-loss records tell only part of a lawyer’s story, but they can be a useful metric.
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Federal Judges Sound Off On Discovery
Federal judges are sick and tired of having to resolve all your discovery disputes because you can’t settle them on your own like grown-ups.
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Litigators, Technology, Trials
Trial Lawyers – You’re Doing It Wrong
Storytelling methods have come a long way, and so have people’s expectations for how they receive information.
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5 Tips For In-House Lawyers To Make Discovery Less Painful
Discovery doesn’t have to suck (well, at least as much as it so often does).
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Contracts, Document Review, Litigators, Plaintiffs Firms, Technology, Trials
Prominent Plaintiffs’ Attorneys Ordered to Pay Up After Losing Breach of Contract Trial
Last week, more than a dozen high-profile mass torts attorneys lost a San Francisco jury trial against a small technology company. The jury decided the attorneys had illegally breached a document review contract during the high-profile Chinese drywall class-action litigation. Tempers are still running hot, and we’ve got more from both sides of the dispute….
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Conferences / Symposia, Document Review, Intellectual Property, Legal Ethics, Litigators, Patents, Qualcomm, Technology
Dispatch from Amelia Island: When Clients Attack
Adam Bier was still a self-described “baby lawyer” when he was wrongfully sanctioned in the landmark 2008 Qualcomm e-discovery case. The appealed sanctions were finally vacated, more than two years after they were first imposed. Bier shared his story with attendees at the Legal Technology Leadership Summit, joined onstage by U.S. Magistrate Judge David Waxse and Frank Cialone, who defended several of the outside counsel in Qualcomm. Read on to learn the details of Bier’s nightmare experience. Can you imagine yourself in his shoes?
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