Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
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Craig Ball of Austin is a trial lawyer, computer forensic examiner, law professor and noted authority on electronic evidence. He limits his practice to serving as a court-appointed special master and consultant in computer forensics and electronic discovery & has served as the Special Master or testifying expert in computer forensics and electronic discovery in some of the most challenging cases.
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
2w ago
Last week, I dug into Cloud Attachments to email, probing the propensity of producing parties’ to shirk collection of linked ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
3w ago
In the E-Discovery Bubble, we’re embroiled in a debate over “Linked Attachments.” Or should we say “Smart Attachments” or “Hyperlinked ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
1M ago
I watched a webinar this morning where the presenters addressed ESI Protocols. They were well-informed people sharing sound advice; but ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
2M ago
Preparing a talk about keyword search, I set out to distill observations gleaned from a host of misbegotten keyword search ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
2M ago
It started just after 7:00 last night. My mailbox swelled with messages confirming I’d subscribed to websites and newsletters around ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
4M ago
Andy Williams used to croon that this is “The Most Wonderful Time of the Year.” For me, it’s time to ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
6M ago
I’m saddened to share that Monica Bay, the forceful, revered former editor of Law Technology News (now Legaltech News) has ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
7M ago
This paper covers ways to become an effective witness and pitfalls to avoid. They say lawyers make notoriously poor witnesses and I have no illusions that I’m a great witness. But after forty years of trial practice and thirty as a forensic examiner, I’ve learned a few lessons I hope might help other examiners build their skills in court ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
1y ago
I’m proud to be the first to announce that the Electronic Discovery Reference Model (EDRM) has developed a specification for ..read more
Ball in your Court | Musings on e-discovery & forensics
1y ago
I recently spent a morning testing ChatGPT’s abilities by giving it exercises and quizzes designed for my law and computer ..read more