Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Updates on Two E-Discovery Sites
Updates to two of the sites I discussed in my recent two-part article, "Discovering E-Discovery on the Web" (Part One, Part Two):
First, I wrote in the article that DiscoveryResources.org "may be the leading e-discovery portal" and that its Sound Evidence blog, written by e-discovery expert Mary Mack, is "one of the best known e-discovery blogs." Tomorrow, the site will be relaunched with a number of updates and improvements. According to Mack, changes to the site will include:
- New navigation for tracking e-discovery best practices and case law.
- New "From the Experts" articles on current e-discovery issues and trends.
- A new "Bookstore" featuring the latest books on e-discovery issues.
- RSS feeds for tracking the latest news and information.
- Updated links to industry resources and judicial opinions.
- A newly designed monthly newsletter.
- Links to industry blogs and other e-discovery community resources.
- Scribd - iPaper Document Library: An online repository of interesting and applicable papers relevant to the field of e-discovery.
- Yahoo! Pipes EDD Mashup: An aggregation of key e-discovery RSS feeds.
- Twitter - ComplexDiscovery Updates: A Twitter feed that highlights the daily posting on the ComplexDiscovery RSS feed.
- Mogulus - Video Learning on EDD: A video channel designed to share publicly available video presentations relating to e-discovery.
- Mofuse - Website Mobile Version: A mobile version of the ComplexDiscovery site designed mobile devices.
Labels: e-discovery
posted by Robert Ambrogi @ 3:17 PM,
2 Comments:
- At 9:02 AM, said...
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Complex Discovery looks like it has good content, but it's impossible to read with the white text on a pale grey background.
- At 2:37 PM, Ben Wright said...
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Robert:
E-discovery reflects the natural collision of technology and legal practice. As an enterprise creates an ever-growing mountain of records, adversaries of course want access to it. Knowing that litigation and e-discovery are inevitable, I argue an enterprise can use technology proactively to make records more benign. What do you think? --Ben http://hack-igations.blogspot.com/2008/05/nix-smoking-gun-e-discovery.html






