Many government agencies
accept electronic records (with some accepting only electronic documents).
Not exact matches
Let's
accept the possibility that people are going to send inappropriate for public eyes
electronic records.
In the study, researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania programmed
electronic health
records (EHR) to alert care providers when a patient was eligible, and prompt them to choose to «
accept» or «decline» a flu vaccination order.
This («Agreement») is dated & nsbp; 6/20/2016 and effective upon the date that the Client
accepts the terms herein via
electronic signature as
recorded electronically by CRA.
The E-consent allows third party lenders we work with to
accept and use
electronic signatures, notices,
records, contractual documents, and legal disclosures while transacting business with you.
There should be a general rule regarding
records in
electronic form that gives the Law Society the discretion to
accept copies of those
electronic records in paper or another form;
the development of a capability to
accept electronic case filing via a portal that will feed into the
electronic document and
records management system so that documents are immediately accessible to Justices and SCC staff as well as in the Courtroom
It might be a good idea to establish an official, or officially
accepted, «trusted source» who could make the copies and
record the
electronic facts, enabling them to be used uncontradicted as proof in litigation.
As we
accept more
electronic gadgets and systems into our lives, we also allow them, knowingly or not, to
record our activities.
A pioneer in the use of
electronic records and briefs, Robin co-authored the California Second District Court of Appeal's first protocol for
electronic briefs (since adopted by other California Courts of Appeal), and he filed the first
electronic brief ever
accepted by a California appellate court.
Using a broad and generally
accepted definition of \
record \ as including
electronic documents, the rules state a fundamental obligation to produce
records that are material and relevant.
In somewhat the same vein, put up a hand if you're in favour of a new rule of lawyer's professional conduct which states that lawyers acting for the winning side in a law suit are allowed to comment on the merits of the result for the media — print,
electronic, and otherwise — only if the lawyers concede, on the
record, that the decision is wrong on the facts and the law, and that they were surprised (nay, astonished, flabbergasted, etc) that any of their arguments were
accepted by the judge.