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	<title>e-discovery 2.0 &#187; cull-down</title>
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		<title>Losing Weight, Developing an Information Governance Plan, and Other New Year’s Resolutions</title>
		<link>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2012/01/17/losing-weight-developing-an-information-governance-plan-and-other-new-years-resolutions/</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2012/01/17/losing-weight-developing-an-information-governance-plan-and-other-new-years-resolutions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2012 17:06:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dean Gonsowski</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/?p=2583</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It’s already a few weeks into the new year and it’s easy to spot the big lines at the gym, folks working on fad diets and many swearing off any number of vices.  Sadly perhaps, most popular resolutions don’t even really change year after year.  In the corporate world, though, it’s not good enough to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft  wp-image-2596" src="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/InfoGov-300x200.jpg" alt="" width="264" height="170" />It’s already a few weeks into the new year and it’s easy to spot the big lines at the gym, folks working on <a href="http://thepaleodiet.com/" target="_blank">fad diets</a> and many swearing off any number of vices.  Sadly perhaps, most popular resolutions don’t even really change year after <a href="http://www.usa.gov/Citizen/Topics/New-Years-Resolutions.shtml" target="_blank">year</a>.  In the corporate world, though, it’s not good enough to simply recycle resolutions every year since there’s a lot more at stake, often with employee’s bonuses and jobs hanging in the balance.</p>
<p>It’s not too late to make information governance part of the corporate 2012 resolution list.  The reason is pretty simple &#8211; most companies need to get out of the reactive firefighting of <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/" target="_blank">eDiscovery</a> given the risks of sloppy work, inadvertent productions and looming sanctions.  Yet, so many are caught up in the fog of eDiscovery war that they’ve failed to see the nexus between the upstream, proactive good data management hygiene and the downstream eDiscovery chaos.</p>
<p>In many cases the root cause is the disconnect between differing functional groups (Legal, IT, Information Security, Records Management, etc.).  This is where the emerging umbrella concept of <a href="http://bit.ly/wJKZRv" target="_blank">Information Governance</a> comes to play, serving as a way to tackle these information risks along a unified front. <a href="http://www.gartner.com/technology/home.jsp" target="_blank">Gartner</a> defines <em>information governance</em>as the:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">“specification of decision rights, and an accountability framework to encourage desirable behavior in the valuation, creation, storage, use, archiving and deletion of information, … [including] the processes, roles, standards, and metrics that ensure the effective and efficient use of information to enable an organization to achieve its goals.”</p>
<p>Perhaps more simply put, what were once a number of distinct disciplines—records management, data privacy, information security and eDiscovery—are rapidly coming together in ways that are important to those concerned with mitigating and managing information risk. This new information governance landscape is comprised of a number of formerly discrete categories:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Regulatory Risks</strong> – Whether an organization is in a heavily regulated vertical or not, there are a host of regulations that an organization must navigate to successfully stay in compliance.  In the United States these include a range of disparate regimes, including the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarbanes%E2%80%93Oxley_Act" target="_blank">Sarbanes-Oxley Act</a>, <a href="http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/understanding/index.html" target="_blank">HIPPA</a>, the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Securities_Exchange_Act_of_1934" target="_blank">Securities and Exchange Act</a>, the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_Corrupt_Practices_Act" target="_blank">Foreign Corrupt Practices Act</a> (FCPA) and other specialized regulations &#8211; any number of which require information to be kept in a prescribed fashion, for specified periods of time.  Failure to turn over information when requested by regulators can have dramatic financial consequences, as well as negative impacts to an organization’s reputation.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Discovery Risks </strong>– Under the discovery realm there are any number of potential risks as a company moves along the <a href="http://www.edrm.net/resources/guides/edrm-search-guide/validation-of-results">EDRM</a> spectrum (i.e., Identification, Preservation, Collection, Processing, Analysis, Review and Production), but the most lethal risk is typically associated with <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2012/01/03/lessons-learned-for-2012-spotlighting-the-top-ediscovery-cases-from-2011/" target="_blank">spoliation sanctions</a> that arise from the failure to adequately preserve electronically stored information (ESI).  There have been literally hundreds of cases where both plaintiffs and defendants have been caught in the judicial crosshairs, resulting in penalties ranging from outright case dismissal to monetary <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/09/15/breaking-news-919-million-verdict-for-dupont-in-trade-secret-theft-and-ediscovery-sanctions-case/" target="_blank">sanctions in the millions of dollars</a>, simply for failing to preserve data properly.  It is in this discovery arena that the failure to dispose of corporate information, where possible, rears its ugly head since the eDiscovery burden is commensurate with the amount of data that needs to be preserved, processed and reviewed.  Some statistics show that it can cost as much as $5 per document just to have an attorney privilege review performed.  And, with every gigabyte containing upwards of 75,000 pages, it is easy to see massive discovery liability when an organization has terabytes and even petabytes of extraneous data lying around.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Privacy Risks </strong>– Even though the US has a relatively lax information privacy climate there are any number of laws that require companies to notify customers if their personally identifiable information (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personally_identifiable_information" target="_blank">PII</a>) such as credit card, social security, or credit numbers have been compromised.  For example, California’s data breach notification law (<a href="http://info.sen.ca.gov/pub/01-02/bill/sen/sb_1351-1400/sb_1386_bill_20020926_chaptered.html" target="_blank">SB1386</a>) mandates that all subject companies must provide notification if there is a security breach to the electronic database containing PII of any California resident.  It is easy to see how unmanaged PII can increase corporate risk, especially as data moves beyond US borders to the international stage where privacy regimes are much more staunch.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Information Security Risks </strong>–<strong> </strong>Data breaches have become so commonplace that the loss/theft of intellectual property has become an issue for every company, small and large, both domestically and internationally.  The cost to businesses of unintentionally exposing corporate information climbed 7 percent last year to over <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-08/security-breach-costs-climb-7-to-7-2-million-per-incident.html" target="_blank">$7 million per incident</a>.  Recently <a href="http://www.thecorporatecounsel.net/Blog/2011/06/senators-ask-sec-for-guidance-on-information-security-risk-disclosure.html" target="_blank">senators asked the SEC</a> to &#8220;issue guidance regarding disclosure of information security risk, including material network breaches” since “securities law obligates the disclosure of any material network breach, including breaches involving sensitive corporate information that could be used by an adversary to gain competitive advantage in the marketplace, affect corporate earnings, and potentially reduce market share.&#8221;  The senators cited a <a href="http://www.affinionsecuritycenter.com/resource_center/show_release.cfm?id=78" target="_blank">2009 survey</a> that concluded that 38% of Fortune 500 companies made a &#8220;significant oversight&#8221; by not mentioning data security exposures in their public filings.</li>
</ul>
<p>Information governance as an umbrella concept helps organizations to create better alignment between functional groups as they attempt to solve these complex and interrelated data risk challenges.  This coordination is even more critical given the way that corporate data is <a href="http://www.economist.com/node/15557443" target="_blank">proliferating</a> and migrating beyond the firewall.  With even more data located in the <a href="http://www.symantec.com/theme.jsp?themeid=liveoffice" target="_blank">cloud</a> and on mobile devices a key mandate is managing data in all types of form factors. A great first step is to determine <a href="http://ediscoveryjournal.com/2011/08/is-information-governance-on-your-radar/" target="_blank">ownership</a> of a consolidated information governance approach where the owner can:</p>
<ul>
<li>Get C-Level buy-in</li>
<li>Have the organizational savvy to obtain budget</li>
<li>Be able to define “reasonable” information governance efforts, which requires both legal and IT input</li>
<li>Have strong leadership and consensus building skills, because all stakeholders need to be on the same page</li>
<li>Understand the nuances of their business, since an overly rigid process will cause employees to work around the policies and procedures</li>
</ul>
<p>Next, tap into and then leverage IT or information security budgets for archiving, compliance and storage.  In most progressive organizations there are likely ongoing projects that can be successfully massaged into a larger information governance play.  A great place to focus on initially is information archiving, since this one of the simplest steps an organization can take to improve their information governance hygiene.  With an archive organizations can systematically index, classify and retain information and thus establish a proactive approach to data management.  It’s this ability to apply retention and (most importantly) expiration policies that allows organizations to start reducing the upstream data deluge that will inevitably impact downstream eDiscovery processes.</p>
<p>Once an archive is in place, the next logical step is to couple a scalable, reactive eDiscovery process with the upstream data sources, which will axiomatically include email, but increasingly should encompass cloud content, social media, unstructured data, etc.  It is important to make sure  that a given  archive has been tested to ensure compatibility with the chosen eDiscovery application to guarantee that it can collect content at scale in the same manner used to collect from other data sources.  Overlaying both of these foundational pieces should be the ability to place content on legal hold, whether that content exists in the archive or not.</p>
<p>As we enter 2012, there is no doubt that information governance should be an element in building an enterprise&#8217;s information architecture.  And, different from fleeting weight loss resolutions, savvy organizations should vow to get ahead of the burgeoning categories of information risk by fully embracing their commitment to integrated information governance.  And yet, this resolution doesn’t need to encompass every possible element of information governance.  Instead, it’s best to put foundational pieces into place and then build the rest of the infrastructure in methodical and modular fashion.<em></em></p>
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		<title>Lessons Learned for 2012: Spotlighting the Top eDiscovery Cases from 2011</title>
		<link>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2012/01/03/lessons-learned-for-2012-spotlighting-the-top-ediscovery-cases-from-2011/</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2012/01/03/lessons-learned-for-2012-spotlighting-the-top-ediscovery-cases-from-2011/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Jan 2012 19:15:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Philip Favro</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/?p=2518</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The New Year has now dawned and with it, the certainty that 2012 will bring new developments to the world of eDiscovery.  Last month, we spotlighted some eDiscovery trends for 2012 that we feel certain will occur in the near term.  To understand how these trends will play out, it is instructive to review some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-2534" src="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/2012-300x201.jpg" alt="" width="221" height="152" />The New Year has now dawned and with it, the certainty that 2012 will bring new developments to the world of <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/" target="_blank">eDiscovery</a>.  Last month, <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/12/08/top-ten-ediscovery-predictions-for-2012/" target="_blank">we spotlighted some eDiscovery trends for 2012</a> that we feel certain will occur in the near term.  To understand how these trends will play out, it is instructive to review some of the <a href="http://www.symantec.com/connect/videos/2011-litigation-lessons-information-management-and-ediscovery" target="_blank"><strong>top eDiscovery cases from 2011</strong></a>.  These decisions provide a roadmap of best practices that the courts promulgated last year.  They also spotlight the expectations that courts will likely have for organizations in 2012 and beyond.</p>
<h3><strong>Issuing a Timely and Comprehensive Litigation Hold</strong></h3>
<p><strong>Case: </strong><a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/EI-du-Pont-de-Nemours-and-Co-v-Kolon-Industries-Inc-Du-Pont-II.rtf" target="_blank"><em>E.I. du Pont de Nemours v. Kolon Industries</em> (E.D. Va. July 21, 2011)</a><strong></strong></p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong> The court issued a stiff rebuke against defendant Kolon Industries for failing to issue a timely and proper litigation hold.  That rebuke came in the form of an instruction to the jury that Kolon executives and employees destroyed key evidence after the company’s preservation duty was triggered.  The jury responded by returning <a href="http://bit.ly/oCRjOU" target="_blank">a stunning $919 million verdict for DuPont</a>.</p>
<p>The spoliation at issue occurred when several Kolon executives and employees deleted thousands emails and other records relevant to DuPont’s trade secret claims.  The court laid the blame for this destruction on the company’s attorneys and executives, reasoning they could have prevented the spoliation through an effective litigation hold process.  At issue were three hold notices circulated to the key players and data sources.  The notices were all deficient in some manner.  They were either too limited in their distribution, ineffective since they were prepared in English for Korean-speaking employees, or too late to prevent or otherwise ameliorate the spoliation.</p>
<p><strong>The Lessons for 2012:</strong> The <em>DuPont</em> case underscores the importance of issuing a timely and comprehensive litigation hold notice.  As <em>DuPont </em>teaches, organizations should identify what key players and data sources may have relevant information.  A comprehensive notice should then be prepared to communicate the precise hold instructions in an intelligible fashion.  Finally, the hold should be circulated immediately to prevent data loss.</p>
<p>Organizations should also consider deploying the latest technologies to help effectuate this process.  This includes an eDiscovery platform that enables automated legal hold acknowledgements.  Such technology will allow custodians to be promptly and properly apprised of litigation and thereby retain information that might otherwise have been discarded.</p>
<p><strong>Another Must-Read Case:</strong> <em><a href="http://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=12876563130873230479&amp;q=Haraburda+v.+Arcelormittal+U.S.A&amp;hl=en&amp;as_sdt=2,5&amp;as_vis=1" target="_blank">Haraburda v. Arcelor Mittal U.S.A., Inc. (D. Ind. June 28, 2011)</a></em></p>
<h3><strong>Suspending Document Retention Policies</strong></h3>
<p><strong>Case:</strong> <em><a href="http://www.quarles.com/files/Uploads/Documents/Viramontes.pdf" target="_blank">Viramontes v. U.S. Bancorp (N.D. Ill. Jan. 27, 2011)</a></em></p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong> The defendant bank defeated a sanctions motion because it modified aspects of its email retention policy once it was aware litigation was reasonably foreseeable.  The bank implemented a retention policy that kept emails for 90 days, after which the emails were overwritten and destroyed.  The bank also promulgated a course of action whereby the retention policy would be promptly suspended on the occurrence of litigation or other triggering event.  This way, the bank could establish the reasonableness of its policy in litigation.  Because the bank followed that procedure in good faith, it was protected from court sanctions under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 37(e) “safe harbor.”</p>
<p><strong>The Lesson for 2012:</strong> As <em>Viramontes</em> shows, an organization can be prepared for eDiscovery disputes by timely suspending aspects of its document retention policies.  By modifying retention policies when so required, an organization can develop a defensible retention procedure and be protected from court sanctions under Rule 37(e).</p>
<p>Coupling those procedures with archiving software will only enhance an organization’s eDiscovery preparations.  <a href="http://www.symantec.com/business/enterprise-vault" target="_blank">Effective archiving software will have a litigation hold mechanism</a>, which enables an organization to suspend automated retention rules.  This will better ensure that data subject to a preservation duty is actually retained.</p>
<p><strong>Another Must-Read Case:</strong> <em><a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Micron-Technology-Inc-v-Rambus-Inc.rtf" target="_blank">Micron Technology, Inc. v. Rambus Inc., 645 F.3d 1311 (Fed. Cir. 2011)</a></em></p>
<h3><strong>Managing the Document Collection Process</strong></h3>
<p><strong>Case:</strong> <a href="http://www.symantec.com/connect/videos/2011-litigation-lessons-information-management-and-ediscovery" target="_blank"><em>Northington v. H &amp; M International</em> (N.D.Ill. Jan. 12, 2011)</a></p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong> The court issued an adverse inference jury instruction against a company that destroyed relevant emails and other data.  The spoliation occurred in large part because legal and IT were not involved in the collection process.  For example, counsel was not actively engaged in the critical steps of preservation, identification or collection of electronically stored information (ESI).  Nor was IT brought into the picture until 15 months after the preservation duty was triggered. By that time, rank and file employees – some of whom were accused by the plaintiff of harassment – stepped into this vacuum and conducted the collection process without meaningful oversight.  Predictably, key documents were never found and the court had little choice but to promise to inform the jury that the company destroyed evidence.</p>
<p><strong>The Lesson for 2012:</strong> An organization does not have to suffer the same fate as the company in the <em>Northington</em> case.  It can take charge of its data during litigation through cooperative governance between legal and IT.  After issuing a timely and effective litigation hold, legal should typically involve IT in the collection process.  Legal should rely on IT to help identify all data sources – servers, systems and custodians – that likely contain relevant information.  IT will also be instrumental in preserving and collecting that data for subsequent review and analysis by legal.  By working together in a top-down fashion, organizations can better ensure that their eDiscovery process is defensible and not fatally flawed.</p>
<p><strong>Another Must-Read Case:</strong> <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Green-v.-Blitz-sanctions-re-self-archiving.pdf" target="_blank"><em>Green v. Blitz U.S.A., Inc.</em> (E.D. Tex. Mar. 1, 2011)</a></p>
<h3><strong>Using Proportionality to Dictate the Scope of Permissible Discovery</strong></h3>
<p><strong>Case:</strong> <em><a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/DCG-Systems-Inc-v-Checkpoint-Technologies-LLC.rtf" target="_blank">DCG Systems v. Checkpoint Technologies</a></em><a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/DCG-Systems-Inc-v-Checkpoint-Technologies-LLC.rtf" target="_blank"> (N.D. Ca. Nov. 2, 2011)</a></p>
<p>The court adopted the new <a href="http://www.patentlyo.com/files/ediscovery-model-order.pdf" target="_blank">Model Order on E-Discovery in Patent Cases</a> recently promulgated by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.  The model order incorporates principles of proportionality to reduce the production of email in patent litigation.  In adopting the order, the court explained that email productions should be scaled back since email is infrequently introduced as evidence at trial.  As a result, email production requests will be restricted to five search terms and may only span a defined set of five custodians.  Furthermore, email discovery in <em>DCG Systems</em> will wait until after the parties complete discovery on the “core documentation” concerning the patent, the accused product and prior art.</p>
<p><strong>The Lesson for 2012:</strong> Courts seem to be slowly moving toward a system that incorporates proportionality as the touchstone for eDiscovery.  This is occurring beyond the field of patent litigation, as evidenced by other recent cases.  Even the State of Utah has gotten in on the act, revising its version of Rule 26 to <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/12/20/new-utah-rule-26-a-blueprint-for-proportionality-in-ediscovery/" target="_blank">require that all discovery meet the standards of proportionality</a>.  While there are undoubtedly deviations from this trend (<em>e.g.</em>, <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/Pippins-v-KPMG.doc" target="_blank"><em>Pippins v. KPMG</em> (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 7, 2011)</a>), the clear lesson is that discovery should comply with the cost cutting mandate of <a href="http://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/frcp/rule_1" target="_blank">Federal Rule 1</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Another Must-Read Case:</strong> <em><a href="http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2011/2169.html" target="_blank">Omni Laboratories Inc. v. Eden Energy Ltd [2011] EWHC 2169 (TCC) (29 July 2011)</a></em></p>
<h3><strong>Leveraging eDiscovery Technologies for Search and Review</strong></h3>
<p><strong>Case:</strong> <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/OraGoogle-546.pdf" target="_blank"><em>Oracle America v. Google</em> (N.D. Ca. Oct. 20, 2011)</a></p>
<p>The court ordered Google to produce an email that it previously withheld on attorney client privilege grounds.  While the email’s focus on business negotiations vitiated Google’s claim of privilege, that claim was also undermined by Google’s production of eight earlier drafts of the email.  The drafts were produced because they did not contain addressees or the heading “attorney client privilege,” which the sender later inserted into the final email draft.  Because those details were absent from the earlier drafts, Google’s “electronic scanning mechanisms did not catch those drafts before production.”</p>
<p><strong>The Lesson for 2012:</strong> Organizations need to leverage next generation, robust technology to support the document production process in discovery.  <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/12/01/when-is-a-draft-note-discoverable/" target="_blank">Tools such as email analytical software</a>, which can isolate drafts and offer to remove them from production, are needed to address complex production issues.  Other technological capabilities, such as <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/electronic-discovery-products/e-discovery-review.php" target="_blank">Near Duplicate Identification</a>, can also help identify draft materials and marry them up with finals that have been marked as privileged.  Last but not least, <a href="http://www.insidecounsel.com/2011/12/19/inside-experts-man-v-machinea-new-e-discovery-gold" target="_blank">technology assisted review</a> has the potential of enabling one lawyer to efficiently complete the work that previously took thousands of hours.  Finding the budget and doing the research to obtain the right tools for the enterprise should be a priority for organizations in 2012.</p>
<p><strong>Another Must-Read Case:</strong> <em><a href="http://amlawdaily.typepad.com/06062011jm_mcdermott.pdf" target="_blank">J-M Manufacturing v. McDermott, Will &amp; Emery (CA Super. Jun. 2, 2011)</a></em></p>
<h3><strong>Conclusion</strong></h3>
<p>There were any number of <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/08/15/gibson-dunns-mid-year-ediscovery-report-highlights-changes-in-sanctions-landscape/" target="_blank">other significant cases</a> from 2011 that could have made this list.  We invite you to share your favorites in the comments section or contact us directly with your feedback.</p>
<p><em>For more on the cases discussed above, watch this video:<a href="http://www.symantec.com/connect/videos/2011-litigation-lessons-information-management-and-ediscovery"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-2556" src="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/top-cases-video-1024x687.png" alt="" width="465" height="312" /></a><br />
</em></p>
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		<title>Top Ten eDiscovery Predictions for 2012</title>
		<link>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/12/08/top-ten-ediscovery-predictions-for-2012/</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/12/08/top-ten-ediscovery-predictions-for-2012/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Dec 2011 15:23:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dean Gonsowski</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/?p=2378</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As 2011 comes quickly to a close we’ve attempted, as in years past, to do our best Carnac impersonation and divine the future of eDiscovery.  Some of these predictions may happen more quickly than others, but it’s our sense that all will come to pass in the near future &#8211; it’s just a matter of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-2379" src="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/Nostradamus_by_Cesar-150x150.jpg" alt="" width="99" height="99" />As 2011 comes quickly to a close we’ve attempted, as in <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2010/11/15/top-five-predictions-in-electronic-discovery/" target="_blank">years past</a>, to do our best <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/01/26/legaltech-new-york-2011-%E2%80%93-the-predictions-issue/" target="_blank">Carnac</a> impersonation and divine the future of <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/" target="_blank">eDiscovery</a>.  Some of these predictions may happen more quickly than others, but it’s our sense that all will come to pass in the near future &#8211; it’s just a matter of timing.</p>
<ol>
<li><strong>Technology Assisted Review (TAR) Gains Speed</strong>.  The area of <a href="http://jolt.richmond.edu/v17i3/article11.pdf" target="_blank">Technology Assisted Review</a> is very exciting since there are a host of emerging technologies that can help make the review process more efficient, ranging from <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/ediscovery-news/pr_06_21_10.php" target="_blank">email threading</a>, <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/01/31/the-business-strategy-behind-clearwell%E2%80%99s-transparent-concept-search/" target="_blank">concept search</a>, clustering, <a href="http://www.forbes.com/sites/benkerschberg/2011/03/23/e-discovery-and-the-rise-of-predictive-coding/" target="_blank">predictive coding</a> and the like.  There are two fundamental challenges however.  First, the technology doesn’t work in a vacuum, meaning that the workflows need to be properly designed and the users need to make accurate decisions because those judgment calls often are then magnified by the application.  Next, the defensibility of the given approach needs to be well vetted.  While it’s likely not necessary (or practical) to expect a judge to mandate the use of a specific technological approach, it is important for the applied technologies to be reasonable, transparent and auditable since the worst possible outcome would be to have a technology challenged and then find the producing party unable to adequately explain their methodology.</li>
<li><strong>The Custodian-Based Collection Model Comes Under Stress.</strong> Ever since the days of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zubulake_v._UBS_Warburg" target="_blank"><em>Zubulake</em></a>, litigants have focused on “key players” as a proxy for finding relevant information during the eDiscovery process.  Early on, this model worked particularly well in an email-centric environment.  But, as discovery from cloud sources, collaborative worksites (like SharePoint) and other unstructured data repositories continues to become increasingly mainstream, the custodian-oriented collection model will become rapidly outmoded because it will fail to take into account topically-oriented searches.  This trend will be further amplified by the bench’s increasing <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/04/20/self-collections-in-e-discovery-%E2%80%93-just-too-risky-for-prime-time/" target="_blank">distrust of manual, custodian-based data collection practices</a> and the presence of better automated search methods, which are particularly valuable for certain types of litigation (e.g., patent disputes, product liability cases).</li>
<li><strong>The FRCP Amendment Debate Will Rage On – Unfortunately Without Much Near Term Progress.</strong> While it is clear that the eDiscovery preservation duty has become a more complex and risk laden process, it’s not clear that this “pain” is causally related to the FRCP.  In the notes from the <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/09/14/dallas-%E2%80%9Cmini-conference%E2%80%9D-explores-big-electronic-discovery-issues-future-still-blurry/" target="_blank">Dallas mini-conference</a>, a pending Sedona survey was quoted referencing the fact that preservation challenges were increasing dramatically.  Yet, <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/10/14/amending-the-frcp-more-questions-than-answers/" target="_blank">there isn’t a consensus viewpoint</a> regarding which changes, if any, would help improve the murky problem.  In the near term this means that organizations with significant preservation pains will need to better utilize the rules that are on the books and deploy enabling technologies where possible.</li>
<li><strong>Data Hoarding Increasingly Goes Out of Fashion. </strong>The war cry of many IT professionals that “<a href="http://www.infoworld.com/d/data-explosion/cheap-disk-storage-really-cheap-195" target="_blank">storage is cheap</a>” is starting to fall on deaf ears.  Organizations are realizing that the cost of storing information is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the litigation risk of having terabytes (and conceivably petabytes) of unstructured, uncategorized and unmanaged electronically stored information (ESI).  This tsunami of information will increasingly become an information liability for organizations that have never deleted a byte of information.  In 2012, more corporations will see the need to clean out their digital houses and will realize that such cleansing (where permitted) is a best practice moving forward.  This applies with equal force to the US government, which has recently <a href="http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20111128_2716.php?oref=topnews" target="_blank">mandated such an effort</a> at President Obama’s behest.</li>
<li><strong>Information Governance Becomes a Viable Reality</strong>.  For several years there’s been an effort to combine the reactive (far right) side of the <a href="http://www.edrm.net/resources/diagram-elements" target="_blank">EDRM</a> with the logically connected proactive (far left) side of the EDRM.  But now, a number of <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/09/18/email-isnt-ediscovery-top-dog-any-longer-recent-survey-finds/" target="_blank">surveys</a> have linked good information governance hygiene with better response times to eDiscovery requests and governmental inquires, as well as a corresponding lower chance of being sanctioned and the ability to turn over less responsive information.  In 2012, enterprises will realize that the litigation use case is just one way to leverage <a href="http://www.symantec.com/business/enterprise-vault" target="_blank">archival</a> and eDiscovery tools, further accelerating adoption.</li>
<li><strong>Backup Tapes Will Be Increasingly Seen as a Liability</strong>.  Using backup tapes for disaster recovery/business continuity purposes remains a viable business strategy, although backing up to tape will become less prevalent as cloud backup increases.  However, if tapes are kept around longer than necessary (days versus months) then they become a ticking time bomb when a litigation or inquiry event crops up.</li>
<li><strong>International eDiscovery/eDisclosure Processes Will Continue to Mature.</strong> It’s easy to think of the US as dominating the eDiscovery landscape. While this is gospel for us here in the States, international markets are developing quickly and in many ways are ahead of the US, particularly with regulatory compliance-driven use cases, like the <a href="http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/23/contents" target="_blank">UK Bribery Act 2010</a>.  This fact, coupled with the menagerie of international privacy laws, means we’ll be less Balkanized in our eDiscovery efforts moving forward since we do really need to be <a href="http://chrisdale.wordpress.com/2011/12/02/you-say-edisclosure-i-say-whatever-is-right-for-the-context/#more-6287" target="_blank">thinking and practicing globally</a>.</li>
<li><strong>Email Becomes “So 2009” As Social Media Gains Traction.</strong> While email has been the eDiscovery darling for the past decade, it’s getting a little long in the tooth.  In the next year, new types of ESI (social media, structured data, loose files, cloud context, mobile device messages, etc.) will cause headaches for a number of enterprises that have been overly email-centric.  Already in 2011, organizations are finding that other <a href="http://www.symantec.com/about/news/release/article.jsp?prid=20110918_01" target="_blank">sources of ESI like documents/files and structured data are rivaling email</a> in importance for eDiscovery requests, and this trend shows no signs of abating, particularly for regulated industries. This heterogeneous mix of ESI will certainly result in challenges for many companies, with some unlucky ones getting <a href="http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/e-discovery_sanctions_reach_all-time_high_for_litigants_and_lawyers/" target="_blank">sanctioned</a> because they ignored these emerging data types.</li>
<li><strong>Cost Shifting Will Become More Prevalent – Impacting the “American Rule.”</strong> For ages, the American Rule held that producing parties had to pay for their production costs, with a few narrow exceptions.  Next year we’ll see even more <a href="http://e-discoveryteam.com/2011/10/20/winning-isnt-everything-its-the-only-thing-examining-the-new-trend-towards-big-e-discovery-cost-awards-for-winners/" target="_blank">courts award winning parties their eDiscovery costs</a> under 28 U.S.C. §1920(4) and Rule 54(d)(1) FRCP. Courts are now beginning to consider the services of an eDiscovery vendor as “the 21st Century equivalent of making copies.”</li>
<li><strong>Risk Assessment Becomes a Critical Component of eDiscovery.</strong> Managing risk is a foundational underpinning for litigators generally, but its role in eDiscovery has been a bit obscure.  Now, with the tremendous statistical insights that are made possible by enabling software technologies, it will become increasingly important for counsel to manage risk by deciding what types of error/precision rates are possible.  This risk analysis is particularly critical for conducting any variety of technology assisted review process since <a href="http://www.edrm.net/resources/guides/edrm-search-guide/validation-of-results#9-4-search-accuracy-precision-and-recall" target="_blank">precision</a>, recall and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F1_score" target="_blank">f-measure</a> statistics all require a delicate balance of risk and reward.</li>
</ol>
<div>
<p>Accurately divining the future is difficult (some might say impossible), but in the electronic discovery arena many of these predictions can happen if enough practitioners decide they want them to happen.  So, the future is fortunately within reach.</p>
</div>
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		<title>Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG)’s Legal Trends Survey Reveals Alarming Inattention to eDiscovery Spending</title>
		<link>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/12/05/enterprise-strategy-group-esg%e2%80%99s-legal-trends-survey-reveals-alarming-inattention-to-ediscovery-spending/</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/12/05/enterprise-strategy-group-esg%e2%80%99s-legal-trends-survey-reveals-alarming-inattention-to-ediscovery-spending/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Dec 2011 15:42:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dean Gonsowski</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/?p=2359</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In their latest survey, entitled “E-Discovery Market Trends: A View from the Legal Department,” Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG) analysts Brian Babineau and Katey Wood analyze a number of interesting statistics and provide a range of insightful conclusions.  By surveying general counsel from large, mid-market (500-999 employees) and enterprise-class organizations in North America they were able [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-2362" src="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/esg_logo.jpg" alt="" width="162" height="115" />In their latest survey, entitled “<a href="http://www.enterprisestrategygroup.com/2011/10/e-discovery-market-trends-a-view-from-the-legal-department/" target="_blank">E-Discovery Market Trends: A View from the Legal Department</a>,” Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG) analysts <a href="http://www.enterprisestrategygroup.com/brian-babineau/" target="_blank">Brian Babineau</a> and <a href="http://www.enterprisestrategygroup.com/katey-wood/" target="_blank">Katey Wood</a> analyze a number of interesting statistics and provide a range of insightful conclusions.  By surveying general counsel from large, mid-market (500-999 employees) and enterprise-class organizations in North America they were able to dive into a range of <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/" target="_blank">eDiscovery</a> topics, including pain points, operational expenses and prioritizations on a go-forward basis.  Some are more intuitive than others, but in either case the results serve as good calibration metrics for those who endeavor to understand the corporate eDiscovery state of the nation.</p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>“Most corporations are not tracking e-discovery spending…” </strong>In what may be the most notable finding of this ESG report, 60% of survey respondents claim that they did not track annual eDiscovery spending in 2010.  The authors correctly note that the eDiscovery process, “which can be highly unpredictable due to its project-by-project nature to begin with, has historically been outsourced to service providers charging at variable rates and often billed back to companies via their law firms.”  Despite the significant challenges of tracking eDiscovery spending, it’s nevertheless irresponsible for organizations to keep their heads in the sand regarding such a significant operational expense.</p>
<p>As the old saw goes, &#8220;you can&#8217;t manage what you can&#8217;t measure,&#8221; so it’s almost <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D58LpHBnvsI" target="_blank">inconceivable</a> to think that so many organizations aren’t tracking such a significant expense category.  For organizations who want to create a repeatable business process, as opposed to the fire-drill chaos that is typically associated with eDiscovery, it’s vitally important to accurately capture core eDiscovery metrics.  For starters, it’s useful to understand basic collection parameters, such as of the typical numbers of key custodians, average data volumes per custodian, data expansion rates, de-duplication statistics, etc.  Once these metrics are in place, it then becomes possible to manage the process and reduce costs.</p>
<p>Katey went on to expound in an exclusive quote for <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog" target="_blank">EDD 2.0</a>:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">“E-discovery can be managed as a strategic business process with an understanding of costs, performance and outcomes. When there’s no basis for reporting or comparison, it’s pin the tail on the donkey.  Corporate litigants won’t ever know they’re getting their money’s worth if they don’t even know what they’re spending.”</p>
<p><strong>“E-Discovery accuracy/efficiency isn’t being measured, in large part.” </strong>Similar to the failure to measure eDiscovery costs, a full two thirds of GCs (67%) aren’t tracking the “efficiency and/or accuracy of e-discovery document review.” Until corporate counsel can link expectations of competency/efficiency with oversight and performance metrics, outside law firms will likely avoid having their feet held to the fire.  This passive stance makes transparency and process improvement difficult at best.  Additionally, this model of having expectations for efficiency, with low or no accountability, doesn’t bode well for the quick adoption of enabling technologies like predictive coding, since the driver has to inherently be the need/desire for increased efficiency (which axiomatically equals lower law firm review bills).</p>
<p><strong> “Corporate information governance and litigation readiness (especially defensible deletion) are a priority, but not yet a reality.”</strong> From an internal prioritization perspective, more than two thirds (69%) of respondents identified their desire to expire/delete data more consistently, “thereby limiting unnecessary data retention for future litigation requests.”  Savvy enterprises correctly recognized the “multi-prong threat of unregulated data retention: the large amounts of irrelevant data ultimately produced for legal review, the greater difficulty of hanging onto potentially litigious documents past their required retention periods.”</p>
<p>This finding is very encouraging, and it ties into the upward momentum the industry is seeing regarding <a href="http://www.insidecounsel.com/2011/12/02/inside-experts-the-top-10-2012-e-discovery-trends?page=2" target="_blank">information governance</a> generally – particularly linking the reactive (right) side of the EDRM with the logically connected and proactive (left) side of the EDRM.  As a good first step it’s critical to see organizations now associating good information governance hygiene with lower costs and better eDiscovery response times.  The ESG finding also triangulates with results from the recent <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/09/18/email-isnt-ediscovery-top-dog-any-longer-recent-survey-finds/" target="_blank">Information Retention and eDiscovery Survey</a>, which found that companies having good information governance hygiene were often able to respond much faster and more successfully to an eDiscovery/investigation requests, often suffering fewer negative consequences.</p>
<p>The only downside to the positive information governance trend, as reported by the survey, was that,</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">“while there are great benefits to defensible deletion, internal initiatives for implementing it too often are stymied by difficulty in obtaining cross functional consensus and authorization, particularly as it touches so many other critical processes like regulatory compliance and legal hold.”</p>
<p><strong>“Legal hold processes are still very manual.”</strong> Another similar question revealed that many companies are attempting to get their information governance house in order, but are still in the very early stages.  When asked about their  current <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/03/16/the-story-behind-clearwell%E2%80%99s-new-litigation-hold-module/" target="_blank">legal hold notification and tracking process</a>, a whopping 69% of organizations said that they are using a “manual process performed by internal staff using e-mail and spreadsheets, etc.”  And, another 6% said they either had no formal process or tracking mechanism.</p>
<p>Given the risks attendant to flaws in the preservation process this area is ripe for improvement.  The good news is that 54% of survey respondents are intending to improve their legal hold process, with 25% planning improvement within the next 12 months.  This is a healthy acknowledgement that there is risk, and with a modicum of investment (time, personnel, procedures, and technology) the legal hold area can be brought up to current best practices.</p>
<p>The ESG survey is a welcome temperature gauge into the state of corporate legal departments.  It notes, in conclusion, “with the staggering growth, diversity and dispersion of data, the pain e-discovery is currently causing large and serial litigants are only a symptom of the larger problem of unwieldy and under-developed information management affecting <em>all</em> businesses.”  With data insights from the ESG survey, it’s becoming clear that foundational information governance elements (like deploying auditable legal hold procedures, tracking eDiscovery spending, updating data maps, etc.) are desperately needed by the many organizations that want to turn eDiscovery into a repeatable business process.  The good news is that many of these organization have improvements in mind for the next 12 months, and the challenge will be to make sure these proactive projects maintain the same level of organizational urgency that it often present for more reactive tasks.</p>
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		<title>Key eDiscovery Considerations for Selecting a Cloud Service Provider</title>
		<link>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/10/25/key-ediscovery-considerations-for-selecting-a-cloud-service-provider/</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/10/25/key-ediscovery-considerations-for-selecting-a-cloud-service-provider/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Oct 2011 18:46:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Philip Favro</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/?p=2251</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The data explosion that has burdened organizations across the globe for the past decade has become increasingly expensive to manage.  Many experts point to storage as the most obvious culprit for higher information governance costs.  There are, however, other factors driving those costs.  For example, demands for electronically stored information in legal and regulatory proceedings [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-2253" src="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/cloud-storage.jpg" alt="" width="239" height="152" />The <a href="http://www.economist.com/node/15557443" target="_blank">data explosion</a> that has burdened organizations across the globe for the past decade has become increasingly expensive to manage.  Many experts point to storage as the most obvious culprit for higher information governance costs.  There are, however, other factors driving those costs.  For example, demands for electronically stored information in legal and regulatory proceedings have significantly increased expenses surrounding data management.  Those demands have forced organizations to meet the high expectations that courts and regulatory bodies have for how they address their information or face the consequences.</p>
<p>Those consequences include sanctions and regulatory fines for groups that fail to account for how they store, manage and discover their information.  The <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/09/15/breaking-news-919-million-verdict-for-dupont-in-trade-secret-theft-and-ediscovery-sanctions-case/" target="_blank">$919 million verdict</a> rendered in the <em>E.I. du Pont de Nemours v. Kolon Industries</em> case is paradigmatic of this trend.  That verdict was inextricably intertwined with the court’s instruction to the jury that executives and employees for defendant Kolon Industries <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2011/09/06/remembering-the-past-deploying-technology-to-ensure-ediscovery-compliance/" target="_blank">deleted key evidence</a> after the company’s preservation duty was triggered.</p>
<p><strong>Going to Cloud Services for Data Archiving and eDiscovery</strong></p>
<p>These rising data costs – and the risks they pose – are driving organizations to explore new technologies and methods for managing their data.  The latest alternative to traditional on-premise solutions involves <a href="http://www.symantec.com/connect/videos/key-considerations-selecting-cloud-service-provider" target="_blank">leveraging cloud-based services</a>.</p>
<p>The hype surrounding the cloud has generally focused on the opportunity for cheap and unlimited storage.  While cost effective data storage is important, that factor alone should not be determinative for selecting a cloud service provider.  Organizations must have the actual – not theoretical – ability to retrieve their data and do so in real time.  Otherwise, they may not be able to satisfy legal or regulatory requests, let alone the day-to-day demands of their operations.<em></em></p>
<p>In an analogous context, courts have traditionally compelled paper document productions even though the requested materials may be buried in a messy warehouse.  In one such case from this year, a U.S. district court in New York ordered a company to turn over decades-old records that were commingled with other materials in poorly labeled, shrink-wrapped boxes.  The court reasoned that <a href="http://www.symantec.com/connect/blogs/court-says-no-messy-garage-defense-orders-production" target="_blank">disorganized record-keeping</a> should not excuse an organization from producing relevant information.  <em>See</em> <em>Brooks v. Macy’s</em> (S.D.N.Y. May 6, 2011).<strong></strong></p>
<p>The rationale from the <em>Brooks</em> case is equally applicable to cloud-based services.  Cloud-based data must be intelligently organized so that companies can retrieve data in a timely fashion for business and legal purposes.  Otherwise, the savings achieved through cheap storage will be negated by the resulting legal quagmire.</p>
<p><strong>Paring Back Superfluous and Duplicative Information</strong></p>
<p>To facilitate the data retrieval process, the right cloud service provider should have the capacity to implement and observe applicable company retention policies.  An effective retention policy will generally help a company retain information that must be kept for business, legal or regulatory purposes – and nothing else.  The service provider should enable automated retention rules to ensure that information is kept only for a designated time period.  This will allow data to be expired once it reaches the end of that period.  And by expiring that data, the company will limit the amount of potentially relevant information available for follow-on litigation.</p>
<p>The pool of information can also be decreased through single instance storage.  This deduplication technology eliminates redundant data by preserving only a master copy of each document placed into the cloud.  This will reduce the amount of data that needs to be identified, collected and reviewed as part of the <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/" target="_blank">electronic discovery</a> process.  For while unlimited data storage may seem ideal now, <em>reviewing</em> unlimited amounts of data will quickly become a logistical and costly nightmare.</p>
<p><strong>Tools to Facilitate Discovery</strong><em></em></p>
<p>A cloud service provider should ideally have <a href="http://www.clearwellsystems.com/e-discovery-blog/2010/05/28/e-discovery-and-the-cloud-the-duty-to-preserve-electronically-stored-information-esi/" target="_blank">eDiscovery functionality</a>.  At a minimum, the service provider should be able to deploy legal holds to prevent users or automated policies from overwriting and destroying data.  Advanced search capabilities should also be included within the cloud-based service to reduce the amount of data that must be analyzed and then reviewed.  Moreover, the provider should support compatible load formats for export to third party review software.</p>
<p>Another key discovery issue is whether the cloud service provider can establish a clear <a href="http://www.edrm.net/resources/glossary/glossary-a/audit-trail" target="_blank">audit trail</a> for transmissions of company data.  Since information could be modified in transit by the routine operation of a service provider’s computer systems, an audit trail is necessary to prove that company documents and their metadata were not affected or otherwise compromised during transmission.  Without this assurance, a company may not be able to demonstrate the authenticity of its data before a tribunal or comply with key regulations.</p>
<p>A cloud server provider that can quickly retrieve and efficiently discover data has the potential to help organizations address their legal and regulatory demands in a cost effective manner.  Such a provider may be just the solution for organizations that are looking to properly address their runaway information governance costs.</p>
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