Discovery burdens in civil litigation are growing exponentially. There are a variety of driving factors, including the sheer magnitude of electronically stored information (ESI) and relatively recent amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure that force assessment and handling of ESI early in litigation.
In the past, lawyers used to review documents for relevance, privilege and other determinations in response to production demands. However, dedicating armies of attorneys to analyze oceans of electronic data simply is not cost-effective for clients, especially in this economy.

Dedicating armies of attorneys to analyze oceans of documents is not cost effective, says Eric Sinrod
So what are companies on the receiving end of broad production demands to do in seeking to meet their ediscovery obligations?
In this climate, it is not surprising that a number of providers have come out of the woodwork that offer to manage, search and cull ESI in response to discovery demands. These solutions themselves can be expensive and technically burdensome. Moreover, it can be difficult for companies to evaluate effectively the provider that is appropriate for a given case.
Clearwell Systems provides ediscovery software for early case assessment that is worthy of consideration for cases that are email-intensive in the discovery arena. Clearwell provides the ability to project potential attorney review costs, an early understanding of case facts and key players, and visual insight into chains of email discussions to allow for the pinpointing of important or otherwise missing custodians.
Importantly, Clearwell allows for easy removal of non-responsive information from email collections right up front based on simple inputted criteria, which can cut down on attorney review time in a massive way, to the substantial savings of the company. Indeed, Clearwell reports that review time can be reduced by up to 90%.
Defensible ediscovery truly requires a three-pronged approach. The client company must be involved and must be cooperative. The company must work with a law firm experienced and skilled in ediscovery matters to guide the process. And a technical solution should be put in place to facilitate, expedite and streamline the work of the attorneys. When it comes to email discovery, Clearwell provides a solution worthy of consideration.
This column was written by Eric Sinrod, an attorney at Duane Morris and a guest blogger at TechPulse 360. It was originally published at FindLaw.com.
Facebook Unveils Comments Box Widget For Third Party Sites
February 20, 2009Joining the social widgets race, Facebook unveiled a Comments Box add-on for third-party Web sites that channels comments back to a user’s Facebook page.
“With the Comments Box, Facebook users on your site can comment on your content, post those comments to their profiles, and share them with their friends on Facebook,” said Rau C. He on the company’s developers blog.
Facebook's comments box
The box is designed to help site developers introduce social Web features to their online properties, He said.
The add-on makes use of Facebook Connect, a sign-on service that lets Facebook members log into other sites with their Facebook IDs and comment using the real names and Facebook profile photo.
Since Connect was launched in December, more than 6,000 developers have used it, with some of their sites experiencing a 40 percent to 50 percent increase in the number of posted comments, Facebook said.