E-discovery

E-discovery, an abbreviated term for electronic discovery refers to any process in which electronic data is sought, located, secured, and searched with the intent of using it as evidence in a civil or criminal legal case. It also refers to the obligation of parties to a lawsuit to exchange documents that exist only in electronic form (known as ESI). Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, enacted in late 2006, now compel include civil litigants to preserve and produce electronic evidence. Examples of electronic documents and data subject to e-discovery are e-mails, voicemails, instant messages, e-calendars, audio files, data on handheld devices, animation, metadata, graphics, photographs, spreadsheets, websites, drawings and other types of digital data.

Data processing in the legal context refers to the adding, changing, deleting, or looking up of required records in a data file or database.

Other services offered are:

Data Reduction services
Attorney Review for Privilege
Attorney Review for Substantial Analysis


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