By Vanessa Blum | February 8, 2019
Santa Clara University law professor Eric Goldman discusses the ways that emojis are creeping into court cases and how judges and litigants are dealing with them.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | January 22, 2019
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed its previous denial of defendant Jay Goldstein's motion to suppress his cell site location information, reasoning Goldstein had no reasonable right to privacy.
By Phillip Bantz | January 7, 2019
Subsentio GC Joel Margolis describes his company as a 'bridge between government, industry and the privacy interests of the subscriber' of a telecommunications carrier.
By Ed Silverstein | November 26, 2018
Following a New Hampshire ruling, attorneys say Internet of Things (IoT) enabled evidence 'presents hard decisions for judges because analog rules do not necessarily make sense in a digital world.'
By Colby Hamilton | November 13, 2018
Electronic signatures to domestic violence allegations may offer convenience and sensitivity to accusers in distressing situations, but critics say the ad hoc nature of the DAs' application of the process means a lack of transparency and accountability.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark A. Berman | November 5, 2018
In his State E-Discovery column, Mark A. Berman discusses recent decisions which make clear that counsel needs to be creative and “think outside of the box” as to how to effectively utilize social media.
By Rhys Dipshan | July 25, 2018
In a move to make courts more comfortable with using cloud-based evidence management tools, CaseLines has a filed a patent to use blockchain as a digital evidence verification feature.
By Stephen Kramarsky | July 16, 2018
In his Intellectual Property column, Stephen Kramarsky discusses the 'Wayback Machine,' an “inconceivably large, entirely free archive that captures and preserves evidence of the contents of the Internet at a given time.”
By Ian Lopez | April 27, 2018
Getting to the discovery stage could prove challenging, but if it does, one expert says it "really opens the door for the DNC lawyers to obtain critical electronic evidence."
By Sue Reisinger | April 26, 2018
Can the FBI pay tech support to look for evidence of misconduct on people's computers?
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