Ricoh eDiscovery

5 of Our Favourite eDiscovery YouTube Videos

Posted by Marketing |4 minute read

Jan 6, 2017 3:14:06 PM

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YouTube is an amazing place where you can quickly discover a new way to search, upload data, review social media or watch the best cat videos on the web. But with so much new content popping up almost daily, it's also easy to get lost inside its dark depths. Before you fall down the "YouTube rabbit hole", we've compiled our list of the five best videos you should watch to up your eDiscovery game.

What are some of your industry favourites? 

1. eDiscovery: Did you Know?

Ralph C. Losey and Jason R. Baron collaborated to create a "Did You Know?" type of music video on electronic discovery law. Uploaded in 2010, this video presents some of the amazing facts behind the information explosion and rapid advances in technology that still hold true today. Think: “How much paper is in a gigabyte of data”.

2. The Veritas Databerg Report: See What Others Don't

A new and largely ignored set of risks are threatening our organisations. The effects of today’s exploding data volumes have gone overlooked by many business leaders. The Databerg concept helps explain how we have got here.

3. Understanding Canadian eDiscovery

Canadian law firm, McCarthy Tétrault, introduces and demystifies the issues clients face when they encounter a statutory or regulatory obligation to locate, review and produce electronic records.

4. Spoiled & Deluded: The Shakespearean Tragedy That is eDiscovery

Keyword search is the gold standard in electronic discovery, but how well does it work? You may be surprised. Former Technology in Practice keynote speaker, Craig Ball will open your eyes to what you’re missing in discovery and reveal the secret pitfalls of electronic search.

5. Canadian Lawyer TV: eDiscovery

Canadian Lawyer TV and WeirFoulds LLP discuss how eDiscovery opens a virtual Pandora's Box of digital information that can be searched, processed and reviewed, but that can also be deleted or altered if we are not judicious in our approach. Just what is discoverable and to what lengths should you go to retrieve that information?

Topics: eDiscovery Solutions

   

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