Litigation Support: insource it or outsource it?

Litigation-support-ecosystem-PDF

 [  Um diesen Beitrag auf Deutsch zu lesen bitte hier klicken ]

         [ La version français de ce billet est disponible ici ]

Much of the work we do in Europe involves intellectual property (IP) and the technology, media and telecommunication (TMT) industries, either staffing litigation projects or special assignments here through Project Counsel, or via our coverage of IP and TMT  through our sister company EAM Capital Partners.  Our work has also included the financial services industry and medical device/pharmaceutical industries.

It has involved us in both the ongoing global patent and copyright litigation wars as well as proactive reviews of internal processes related to e-discovery with an eye toward reducing risks and costs associated with future litigation or government investigations.   This has afforded us the opportunity to attend several World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) conferences on managing IP litigation, and the role played by e-discovery.   WIPO is a well known name in the fields of intellectual property rights (IPRs) and dispute resolution and has been establishing itself in areas like cyber law disputes, cyber forensics disputes, and … Read more

Paradigm shifts: random thoughts on predictive coding, data privacy, IBM, neuroscience and other stuff as we close out the year

Good-news-I-hear-the-paradigm-is-shifting

Fifty years ago, Thomas Kuhn, then a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, released a thin volume entitled The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. I recently attended an MIT/Harvard symposium on the effects of the book’s publication.

Kuhn challenged the traditional view of science as an accumulation of objective facts toward an ever more truthful understanding of nature. Instead, he argued, what scientists discover depends to a large extent on the sorts of questions they ask, which in turn depend in part on scientists’ philosophical commitments. Sometimes, the dominant scientific way of looking at the world becomes obviously riddled with problems; this can provoke radical and irreversible scientific revolutions that Kuhn dubbed:

“paradigm shifts”

Yes, introducing a term that has been much used and abused.

Paradigm shifts interrupt the linear progression of knowledge by changing how scientists view the world, the questions they ask of it, and the tools they use to understand it. Since scientists’ worldview after a paradigm shift is so radically different from the one that came before, the two cannot be compared according to a … Read more

From LeWeb Paris 2012: Cyborgs, location, future interface and maps

LeWeb-Paris-2012

I can’t believe Le Web Paris 2012 is already over for 2012. My head is crammed with so many thoughts from the past three days. The two that keeping coming back to me are (1) we are all cyborgs and (2) you can learn life lessons from ultra marathon runners  (a great presentation on the quantified self).  I distinguish “Paris” from “London” since LebWeb launched a London version last year, to be repeated next June.

LeWeb is Europe’s most established tech conference, the brainchild of French serial entrepreneur Loic Le Meur.  Le Web has been the primus inter pares, but the growing size and scale of the Dublin Web Summit poses an interesting challenger. LeWeb runs for three days and there were about 3,500 of us, most from across Europe but a good number from the U.S.  It is a brilliant range of speakers and presentations.  But the real reason people come:  to network.  And much like the Mobile World Congresswhich I attend every year, it is a networking bonanza.

This year Le Web’s focus is on the … Read more