Title: Brian Dirking
1Preparing for Electronic Discovery
- Brian Dirking
- Principal Product Director
- February 21, 2008
2Agenda
- Status of Electronic Records Management
- How to Find Requested Content
- How to Better Prepare for Litigation
- Protecting Content In Circulation
- Why Your IT Organization Should Care
- Closing Remarks
3Status of Electronic Records Management
4Situation TodayContent Growth
- Companies are generating tremendous amounts of
content - And those growth rates are themselves growing
- Email
- Instant Messaging
- Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, etc.)
- Web Content
- Reports
- Collaborative content
- Most of the content is (at best) redundant, and
(more likely) outdated or counterproductive
5Situation TodayElectronic Records Policies
Retain nothing
6Situation TodayContent Volume Issues
- Issues for Users
- Workers spend large amounts of time searching for
content - Outdated or uncontrolled content can lead to poor
decisions - Issues for IT
- Large amounts of money are spent finding and
implementing technologies to cope - Search
- Storage
- Enterprise Content Management
- Archiving / Backup
- Labor is spent managing and implementing these
technologies, and handling requests for content - IT is often designing content retention policies,
and shouldnt be
7Situation TodayContent Volume Issues (cont.)
- Issues for Legal
- Discovery is extremely costly
- The cost of discovery is (roughly) proportional
to the volume of content - From a discovery perspective, it is risky to keep
information that should be eliminated
8Situation TodayDiscovery
- Almost everything electronic is discoverable
- Today it is black letter law that computerized
data is discoverable if relevant."
Anti-Monopoly, Inc. v. Hasbro, Inc., No.
94CIV2120, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16355 (S.D.N.Y.
1995)
9Situation TodayDiscovery
- Almost everything electronic is discoverable
- Discovery difficulty is not a valid excuse
- Deficiencies in the retrieval system cannot be
sufficient to defeat a good faith request to
examine relevant information. If a party
chooses an electronic storage method, the
necessity for a retrieval program or method is an
ordinary and foreseeable risk.Kaufman v.
Kinkos Inc., 2002 WL 32123851 (Del. Ch. 2002)
10Situation TodayDiscovery
- Almost everything electronic is discoverable
- Discovery difficulty is not a valid excuse
- Discovery cost is generally not a valid excuse
- Plaintiff sought 800 backup tapes from Toshiba
claimed cost of processing tape (analyzing data,
identifying and restoring files, searching,
producing specified data) would have been 1.5 to
1.9 million. Toshiba asked plaintiff to split or
cover the cost. Trial court ordered Toshiba to
produce at their own expense.Toshiba v. Superior
Court of Santa Clara County, 124 Cal. App. 4th 72
(Cal App. 2004).
11Situation TodayDiscovery
- Almost everything electronic is discoverable
- Discovery difficulty is not a valid excuse
- Discovery cost is generally not a valid excuse
- Spoliation can be extremelyeven fatallycostly
- Adverse inference instruction contributed to
1.45 billion judgment against Morgan Stanley.
Finding Morgan Stanley grossly negligent in
failing to produce Emails, overwriting Emails
after twelve months in violation of an SEC order,
failing to conduct proper searches for back-up
tapes that may have contained Emails, and failing
to notify plaintiff or the Court when it
discovered new Emails. Coleman Holdings v.
Morgan Stanley Co., No. CA 003-5045AI, 2005 WL
674885, at 9-10 (Fla. Cir. Ct. March 23, 2005).
12Content Retention Principles
- Dont retain more content than is necessary
- There is nothing wrong with a policy of
destroying documents after the point is reached
at which there is no good business reason to
retain them.Arthur Andersen, LLP v. United
States, 125 S. Ct. 2129, 213135 (2005) Fidelity
Nat. Title Ins. Co. of New York v. Intercompany
Nat. Title Ins. Co., 412 F.3d 747, 750 (7th Cir.
2005)
13Content Retention Principles
- Dont retain more content than is necessary
- Apply policies consistently and universally
- Destruction of data pursuant to valid document
retention policy did not warrant spoliation
sanctionsHynix Semiconductor, Inc. v. Rambus,
Inc., No. C-00-20905 RMW (N.D. Cal. Jan. 4,
2006).
14Content Retention Principles
- Dont retain more content than is necessary
- Apply policies consistently and universally
- Apply legal holds promptly and universally
- Courts have demonstrated little toleration for
spoliation. (Enron, etc.)
15Content Retention Principles
- Dont retain more content than is necessary
- Apply policies consistently and universally
- Apply legal holds promptly and universally
- Enable the right people to design the policies
- Policies should make sense from a risk
management, legal, and operational standpoint - Get IT out of the business of making retention
policies
16Yet Recent Research Indicates
65 of records management professionals did not
include electronic records in legal holds.
46 of records management professionals did not
have a formal policy for implementing legal
holds.
17Survey 1
- Does your organization have a policy for
implementing legal holds on electronic
information? - Yes
- No
- Dont know
18How to Find Requested Content
19How do we find content today?
- Searching email servers
- Searching content repositories
- File shares
- Archives
- Backup tapes
- Hard drives
- CDs and thumb drives
20Investigators identified at least seven occasions
on which Kerviel faked messages between April
2007 and Jan. 18, four of them referencing trades
that never existed. The deception was eventually
uncovered when they could find no trace of
Kerviel receiving the purported messages in the
bank's e-mail archival system...
21Survey 2
- What kind of email archiving system does your
organization use? - Symantec Enterprise Vault
- Zantaz
- Mimosa
- AXS-One
- Dont know
22How to Better Prepare
23Records Management
- Regulatory Forms
- Communications
- Permits/Licenses
- Insurance Policies
- Policies and procedures to govern the process of
retaining and destroying content
24Records Mgmt. and Retention Mgmt.What is the
difference?
25Retention ManagementWhat is a Policy?
- Records and Retention policies combine events and
actions - Events
- Content expired (e.g. a contract)
- Usage statistics (e.g. document has not been
accessed in 6 months) - Business event (e.g. environmental impact filing)
- Content life cycle event (e.g. new revision
checked in) - Actions
- Delete
- Notify author
- Archive
- Move
- Delete revisions
- Revise
26Records and Retention Management Evolution
- Preserve paper records
- Schedule destruction
- Line of business application
- Archivist
- Preserve electronic records
- Schedule destruction
- Integrated with CMS or separate application
- Schedule destruction of non-records
- Within single repository
- Apply across multiple repositories
- Schedule destruction of non-records
27The Ideal SolutionDont just cope, fix it
- Universal Address the root cause by cataloging,
applying retention policies, and applying holds
to all content - Regardless of location
- Regardless of whether it is a record or not
- Regardless of whether it is electronic or
physical - In-place Apply holds and retention management
actions in-place - Minimize impact on users
- Reduce issues associated with moving electronic
content - Leverage existing applications
- Flexible Provide features needed to address all
content, not just records - Retention triggers based on calendar, event,
usage, revision - Retention actions Delete, move, alert, create
28The Ideal SolutionBenefits
- Reduce the risk of keeping too much or too little
information - Reduce cost of discovery
- Support regulatory requirements
- Reduce clutter so that users can do their jobs
more effectively - Reduce storage and backup costs
- All while applying legal holds
29Protecting Content In Circulation
30Content Outside Your Firewall
- Partners sharing price lists
- Board communications
- Mergers Acquisition information
- Content shared due to litigation
31Information Rights Management
- Set policies for content access such as view,
print and copy - Update policies on content remotely disable
content from being viewed - Audit content usage when content was viewed,
printed - Force refresh when content has gone out-of-date
32Why Your IT Organization Should Care
33Typical Content Growth Example company -
storage, archiving, services costs
- Email
- 10,000 user mailboxes, 100 MB per mailbox 1 TB
- 10 sent msgs/day, 25 recd _at_ 15 K per 5.25 GB
- Growth rate of 137
- Documents
- 10,000 users storing 2.5 GB documents 25 TB
- Create 1 MB/day 100 GB
- Growth rate of 100
- Calculated at 50/GB annual storage/archiving/ser
vice cost -
34Storage Savings Storage, archiving, services
- Deleting content kept beyond its retention
period can save up to 33 of your storage costs - Based upon deleting 50 of your content that is
beyond its retention period.
35Restoration CostsThe Cost to IT
- What would it cost to find everywhere content
exists in your organization file system,
email, applications, repositories, desktop,
archives, backup tapes. - What would it cost you to restore this content
for review?
36Discovery Costs
- Discovery costs are typically 1,800 to 2,500
per GB - One time discovery on 20 of your data at 1,800
per GB
37Litigation Preparedness
- In case of litigation, it is important to have
strong control over your content - Know what evidence you have
- Quickly search it for relevant information
- Know the strength of your case called knowing
hand - Present organized data at discovery meetings
- Catalog of content, per new Civil Rules of
Federal Procedure
38Litigation Savings
- A typical 1B revenue company has 146 lawsuits
per year. - 25 of lawsuits are settled earlier based on
knowing hand and immediate access to evidence
(140 lawsuits x 25 35). - Estimated savings approximated at 20 per early
settled lawsuit (1.5 million average lawsuit
cost x 20 300,000). - Year 1 Savings 35 lawsuits settled early at a
savings of 10.5 million. - Year 2 Savings 35 lawsuits settled early at a
savings of 10.5 million. - Year 3 Savings 35 lawsuits settled early at a
savings of 10.5 million. - Total Savings 3 Years 105 lawsuits settled early
at a savings of 31.5 million.
39Total Savings
- Quantifiable Cost/Savings Comparison
- Storage savings over 3 years 2.3 million
- Restoration savings, 2009 20 million
- Discovery savings, 2009 12 million
- Litigation savings, per year 10.5 million
- Non-Quantifiable Cost/Saving Comparison
- Decreased corporate risk (exposure) though
implementation of document retention process. - Increased flexibility for new Federal Rules of
Civil Procedures i.e. Meet and Confer early
access/understanding of scope of evidence. - Less vulnerability to nuisance lawsuits
- Decreased cost due to employee ability to locate
knowledge resources amidst less clutter
40ltInsert Picture Heregt
Closing Remarks