Today, e-discovery has become vital to attorneys and to their law businesses, however, some misconceptions exist such as Microsoft Vista’s effect on e-discovery. On Lawyer 2 Lawyer, Bob Ambrogi talks with the experts, Stephen D. Whetstone, Esq., VP of Client Development & Strategy for Stratify and Attorney Craig Ball, trial attorney and computer forensics examiner, to weigh in on the misconceptions of e-discovery and what the future holds for e-discovery. Go to Legal Talk Network
With Mike Simon of Stratify in Texas Lawyer, October, 2006
PDF: 20 Pages, 4.7 MB
An article by Ramana Venkata, CEO. in Of Counsel, October, 2006
PDF: 4 Pages, 956 KB
The importance of concept organization in electronic discovery, and the Stratify solution.
PDF: 10 Pages, 158 KB
A letter from Ramana Venkata, CEO about the Outlook e-mail bug and its lack of impact on Stratify’s native file review solution.
A new article by Stephen D. Whetstone, Esq. and Michael Simon, Esq. looking at recent court rulings and electronic data discovery.
PDF: 4 Pages, 176 KB
By Stephen D. Whetstone, Esq. and Michael Simon, Esq. What you should know about the coming changes.
Article by David Bayer, Stratify’s VP of Marketing & Business Development, and Michael Simon, Esq., Legal Associate, Client Development & Strategy at Stratify.
PDF: 4 Pages, 143 KB
Article by Stephen D. Whetstone, Vice President for client development and strategy at Stratify, February 2006
PDF: 3 Pages, 169 KB
Article by Ramana Venkata, CEO of Stratify, December 2005
PDF: 4 Pages, 165 KB
LJN, October 2005
PDF: 3 Pages, 75 KB
LJN, September 2005
PDF: 2 Pages, 56 KB
LJN, February 2005
Law.com, February 2005
A comprehensive guide to evaluating electronic discovery providers — and learn the six critical factors for every case.
PDF: 6 Pages, 162 KB
Whether defendant or plaintiff, making the most of discoverable information may be the difference between company survival and demise. Read about a few recent high-profile examples.
PDF: 4 Pages, 175 KB
by Stephen D. Whetstone and Kara A. Millonzi
How does a company know where to look for potentially responsive data? When should it stop searching? In what format must documents be produced? What if data is altered or destroyed? Who pays the costs for the search and review? Although the 1970 amendments to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34 clearly contemplate that electronic data is a proper subject for discovery,10 courts only recently have begun to systematically address these issues.
PDF: 21 Pages, 220 KB
Accountability. Now more than ever investors are demanding it. Legislation is mandating it. And businesses have to manage it. Recent corporate scandals have shaken both confidence and conduct, which is rapidly changing the way companies conduct business today.
PDF: 3 Pages, 46 KB
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