"I find it fascinating," Symantec e-discovery attorney Phil Favro said, in Mountain View, Calif. "I think that anything that can get cross-border standards on e-discovery is a good thing, and that having an international body with collaboration from key players in the industry establishing those standards will go a long way, hopefully, to addressing the misunderstandings that exist between different countries."
"ISO, let's face it, they're setting the standards across the board," Favro said. "I don't see this as anything but a value-add."
At HP, in Palo Alto, Calif., standards specialist Eva Kuiper was enthusiastic. "[It] is good for the industry overall to be discussing a global ISO standard on the technical aspects of e-discovery. HP will be reviewing the standard and providing comments as it progresses," she said.
Yet many supporters hedge their bets. Losey, who writes the e-Discovery Team blog, said a standard is useful if Hibbard's team avoids areas of law: "I'm very much a believer in engineering and technology people working with lawyers," he said. But, he quipped, "I do not want to have Captain Kirk in the engineering room, and I do not want Scotty running the bridge," referencing Star Trek.
Barnett noted that a standard could become too wide to manage, and Favro observed potential overlap with existing work from the Sedona Conference think tank.
CONCERNS AND NEXT STEPS
Industry consultants George Socha, known for his work on the Electronic Discovery Reference Model, and Karl Schieneman, of Review Less, both agreed that a standard could help, yet wondered aloud if it's ahead of its time.
"Our field would benefit from well-designed standards, as the status quo is far from sufficient. That said, e-discovery is a rapidly changing space and we are talking about litigation, which by definition involves adversaries," said Socha, based in St. Paul, Minn. "That means, I suspect, that no one is going to be able to come up with any comprehensive e-discovery standards in the near future whose use will ensure that a litigant will be able to successfully argue, 'We used XYZ-standard vendor, so there's nothing to argue about'," he said.
Socha continued, "If the approaches used to develop ISO standards help improve the quality of work performed under the broad umbrella of e-discovery then that should be a positive thing. Just as no one person or organization has the exclusive franchise for thought-leadership in the e-discovery space, no one standard-setting body has that franchise when it comes to efforts to develop standards for the e-discovery arena. Rather, I suspect that what will be the most beneficial for the largest number of e-discovery consumers and providers would be an approach whereby multiple standard-setting bodies were able to work together toward a common goal."
Schieneman had a similar response. "Obviously international e-discovery is a growing problem. But the tension with standardizing processes requires you to know which processes you want to standardize. You need to know what works. The big issue right now is experimentation," he said, in Pittsburgh. "Predictive coding, cloud computing, bring-your-own-device, social networking there are lots of problems that are out there. These data forms keep changing," noted Schieneman. "So I think having an international committee is not a bad thing to try to deal with these issues, but the bigger challenge is trying different approaches to figure out what works."
Differences of opinion aside, ISO delegations from dozens of countries Wednesday are voting on whether to make Hibbard's new committee official. That appears to be a formality. Only five affirmative votes are required for a project to advance from its consideration stage into formalization. In addition to support from the American delegation where anyone can participate and officially comment via an established committee called INCITS delegations from Italy, Japan, South Africa, and the U.K. already indicated their support, Hibbard explained. Assuming the ballot passes, Hibbard said he and U.K.-based forensic scientist Angus Marshall will be appointed as project managers, probably by late May. A draft report would be due in July and comments would be requested by August.
Hibbard, based in Santa Clara, Calif., said he welcomes EDRM and Sedona Conference participation in the project. Hibbard and Losey shared a panel discussion in January at the American Bar Association E-Discovery and Information Governance National Institute, in Tampa, Fla., where they were joined by Jason R. Baron, director of litigation at the U.S. National Archives. Baron in June 2012 proposed the formation of a similar quality control standard but without the process aspects. His project, unrelated to Hibbard's, does not yet have formal support from any standards body. Baron, in an interview at LegalTech New York this month, said he personally supports the ISO 9001 aspect of Hibbard's plan and he hopes to form his own committee by this spring.
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