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Read the book by E.T.I. Member Michael S. Holihan
| Electronic Evidence & Information Gluttony |
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Peter Drucker once said, "...The most important contribution...in the 21st
century is...[the] increase productivity of Knowledge Work and the
Knowledge Worker."
Drucker recognized in the early 60s what has already proven to be true in the present age: US businesses would soon undermine themselves with information gluttony. According to the latest reports coming out of Berkeley, about 400,000 TERAbytes of new information is generated each year by e-mail alone. And yet, 59% of US companies did not have any e-mail retention policies. US Corporations spent $4.6 billion in 2005 to analyze their internal e-mails, but still 62% of these same corporations doubt they would be able to show that their e-mail records are accurate and reliable. In this current age of the "Information Superhighway," companies literally "do not know what they know." And for attorneys who must review this avalanche of information (often from multiple sources) to ferret out "smoking guns" for a trial, this problem of information overload is much more compounded. (continued...)
Our current methods of electronic discovery (the process of collecting
and reviewing electronic evidence generated by both sides of a lawsuit)
is limited by our present day storage and filing systems. Like the much
revered Dewey decimal system, much of the data generated today is still
classified using taxonomies, foldering systems based on categorizations
and their relationships. One of the more visible limitation of this
type of filing is that seldom would two people classify information in
the same way. After all, what would be considered important by an
engineer would probably not hold the same weight for an accountant.
Would a letter regarding the purchase of a Microsoft license be filed
under "Software", "Budget", "License", or "Correspondence"? The answer
will generally depend on the content of the letter and also the
interpretation of the content by the reader.
rticle Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/cyber-law-articles/electronic-evidence-information-gluttony-439748.html
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