August 17, 2009

earlyCASE Expands Its eDiscovery Early Case Assessment software with on-demand Filtering and Culling of Data

Author: admin - Categories: Case Assessment, Litigation Holds, MetaData, eDiscovery, filter and cull - Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Preserve, Collect, Analyze and Reduce the size of electronically stored information seamlessly during early case assessment directly from your computer.

 

ATLANTA, GA (August 19, 2009) – Atlanta-based earlyCASE, the leader in advanced early case assessment for Electronically Stored Information (ESI) and eDiscovery, today released filtering and culling capabilities in its market-leading eDiscovery early case assessment software available as Software-as-a-Service  “SaaS”  from HUwww.earlycase.comUH.  earlyCASE is a SaaS web-based eDiscovery application which uses an on-demand deployment model (runs on your local PC), collects, preserves, analyzes and filters the ESI that your computer can access in-place without the data ever leaving your computer or network.

 

earlyCASE allows you to quickly and safely collect, organize, understand eDiscovery data, and apply filter / culling rules before it is processed for discovery.  It supports Unicode, extracts metadata, generates hash values, detects duplicates, removes known system files and creates a local inventory database of documents and emails. earlyCASE allows users to make informed discovery decisions, easily and quickly cut down the size of data sets through filter and culling rules before going into the meet and confer, discovery processing  and document review.

 

In the past, preserving, collecting, analyzing and filtering electronically stored information had to be handled in separate steps. earlyCASE can safely collect ESI, preserve all metadata, seamlessly analyze and filter the ESI to deliver rapid early case assessment and reduction in the amount of data being processed and reviewed.   With the release today of the latest version of earlyCASE, you can create filter rules and see in real time the reduction in size and counts these rules have, then use earlyCASE to quickly separate the filtered documents, files and emails from the collection all without any additional software or costs.

 

“We are excited to add integrated capabilities to filter ESI to the list of professional features available in earlyCASE.  In addition to now removing known system files, filtering and culling data, earlyCASE handles PST’s, NSF’s, EnCase Images and loose files.  The Ultra low cost, flexibility and speed that eDiscovery early case assessment as a software- as-a-service delivers is unparalleled,” said Tom Strack, CEO of earlyCASE. “earlyCASE brings ease of use, immediate and real understanding to the eDiscovery process at the earliest moment, the lowest cost, and at an unprecedented speed, giving clients a complete view into the expanded data they have and the budgets associated with handling the ESI. With data storage continuing to increase in size, it is common to have terabytes of information to collect, process and review. earlyCASE can safely collect, rapidly analyze that data and decrease the data sets that need to be reviewed, reducing not only eDiscovery budgets, but managing their legal risk. earlyCASE can process the data in-place without it ever leaving where it is stored, using your own people and equipment and without any per gigabyte charges. “

 

earlyCASE is offered in three versions, a Basic (FREE) version, a Professional version for a small flat rate charge, regardless of the amount of data you analyze, and an enterprise edition. The Basic version offers 40+ high-quality eDiscovery reports, details the expanded sizes and counts of the data, estimates your processing and review budget and provides a long list of detailed as well as summary reports.     With the Professional version, duplicate files and emails are identified, Lotus Notes files are processed, Known System Files are identified, EnCase images are processed. earlyCASE Professional also provides the ability to set filtering rules can be applied to reduce the amount of data, a 26(f) report for meet and confer is available to help clients reduce legal risk exposure by offering a necessary view of the legal case information—custodians, context, third parties, and more. earlyCASE provides you the tools and results to best understand, define and memorialize the ESI going into the meet and confer. Duplicate document detection and removal, removal of known system files, elimination of files outside the dates of interest, container processing (zip, rar, arc), Lotus Notes NSF’s, EnCase images and numerous Filtering options are the primary reasons most people use the Professional version of earlyCASE.

 

earlyCASE and the earlyCASE logo are trademarks of Level 9 Corporation

EnCase is a registered trademark of Guidance Software Inc.

Lotus Notes, IBM, Lotus Domino, Lotus Domino Express are trademarks of IBM Corporation.

AFF is a trademark of Simson Garfinkel and Basis Technology Corp.

All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

 

For more information, visit HUhttp://www.earlycase.comUH.

 

Press Contact:

 

Tom Strack 

CEO

earlyCASE

PO Box 2474

Kennesaw, GA 30152

P: 770-250-0289

E: HUTom.Strack@earlycase.comUH

June 15, 2009

Zen and the art of early case assessment to eliminate irrelevant ESI

Author: admin - Categories: Case Assessment, Litigation Holds, MetaData, eDiscovery, filter and cull - Tags: , , , , , , ,

In a day where there is and a seemingly endless amount of email, files, folders, databases, and on and on and on where do you start in separating the meaningful documents from the masses of what you have?

Let’s look at how to leverage the reports and analysis available in earlyCASE to make sense of the ESI in the context of defining filtering and culling rules.    As many matters needs vary, the approach outlined here will be generic, adapt the reports you use as needed.

The major areas that ESI can quickly be eliminated or reduced (generally subject to the parties’ agreement) are:

1.      Restricting the Custodians and locations of data to be reviewed.

2.      Eliminating Folders / Paths that are system or temporary file locations.

3.      Restricting The Types of Files that are to be “Included” or to be “Excluded”

4.      Restricting The Date Range of Emails and Documents.

5.      Removing Duplicate emails and Files – Selection of the de-duplication method.

Let’s look at the earlyCASE reports that help with these 5 areas:

1.      Looking at the custodians report will show you the number of emails, attachments and files by custodian along with the date ranges of that custodians information.   For instance a custodian that has little to no email or files within the date range being looked at, may likely be an irrelevant to process and review.   Likewise looking at the email to and from reports will identify potential custodians which may be useful to look at based on the To / From reports as well as the Conversation summary.  In addition the Expanded sizes and Counts report will assist you indentifying what media the custodians information is on.   You will see as more pieces of media (drives, etc) are processed that later media will have a much higher percentage of duplicates.   You may even find that certain pieces of media can be skipped entirely.

2.      The locations (media, drives, and folders) should be reviewed to insure that temporary system location and file storage areas are not included in what is processed.    On most desktop computers Internet access as well as programs create thousands and at times tens of thousands of temporary files.   If your file type criteria include for instance HTML and Text files, you will likely be processing and reviewing a significant number of file fragments and temporary files which are in fact useless junk.   Looking at the Folders > 100 files report along with the Folder Inventory All report will assist you in isolating folders which can be skipped over (i.e. not processed and reviewed).    Also look at the Container Summary and Container File Details to see what containers you have as well as generally what is in them.     Identifying drives, network shares, media that is duplicative as well as irrelevant will save you a lot of time, money and effort.

3.      earlyCASE includes a number of reports to assist in understanding the types and counts of the loose files as well files attachments to email.   The File Type Summary will organize and show you all of the file types, counts and sizes.   Take a look at the Office File Types and the DeDup – File Type Summary to quickly identify the files types that should be “Included” or “Excluded” from processing and review.   Be careful to select EITHER an “Include” or “Exclude” strategy – Mixing methods is a bad idea.  Next look at the Generally Included File Types,  Generally Excluded file types and Unknown file types reports to make sure that your instructions on file types are clear. 

4.      Dates are generally pretty clear in terms of what should be in or out.   The File Date Summary and the Top 25 File Dates show the date ranges of the file in the collection.    The email to and from report show the date ranges of the emails and the container summary also assist in understanding the counts and sizes related to date ranges.

5.      Removing duplicates is done initially on a global basis or on a custodian basis.  The Duplicates (Custodian) and Duplicates (Global) reports will show you the overall duplicate email and file counts as well as the breakdown by custodian.   De-Duplicating globally will eliminate the most emails and files, but may meet with some resistance by those doing the document review.  These reports will let you see the difference in the counts and sizes from the two approaches.

 

Now that you have marked up reports, redlined dates and file types, figured out which media is relevant.   You has the basis of a clear set of filter cull rules as well as what should be outright skipped.   Having the earlyCASE reports as the basis of this process eliminates arbitrary and unfounded decisions which may be challenged later and could create problems later.

For more information on early case assessments and using earlyCASE visit:       www.earlyCASE.com