Sentences with phrase «allowing predictive coding»

A copy of defendants» motion for a protective order to allow predictive coding is available here.

Not exact matches

Or predictive coding that requires far fewer lawyer hours to do eDiscovery work and allows them more time to explore and test new opportunities with their clients.
Where, as here, petitioners reasonably request to use predictive coding to conserve time and expense, and represent to the Court that they will retain electronic discovery experts to meet with respondent's counsel or his experts to conduct a search acceptable to respondent, we see no reason petitioners should not be allowed to use predictive coding to respond to respondent's discovery request.
Ringtail's predictive coding uses a visual approach that allows legal teams to easily cull non-relevant materials and prioritize important concepts, custodians and documents for review.
On recent matters, advanced analytical technology, including Document Mapper, Mines, Cubes and predictive coding, allowed Acuity clients to:
However, emerging technologies that allow users to «train» software to distinguish between relevant and non-relevant documents (typically known as predictive coding, or technology assisted review) are making internal review much more viable (learn much more about this in the Review section of this guide).
FTI Persuades Canadian Competition Bureau to Allow Document Processing with Predictive Coding For the First Time in Canada 11/3/2015
Apr. 18, 2013)-RRB-(«Biomet I»), the court refused to require the responding party to do predictive coding on the entire corpus of its documents, instead allowing it to rely on the keyword searching it used initially to filter the material prior to predictive coding.
In fact, predictive coding shows tremendous promise outside of the litigation bubble altogether, as an information governance tool allowing organizations to proactively code, categorize and filter documents at the point of creation.
«Predictive coding» is a document review technology that allows computers to predict particular document classifications (such as «responsive» or «privileged») based upon coding decisions made by those knowledgeable as to the subject matter.
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