Best Practices White Papers

Digital Discovery: State of the Law

Overview While the translation of discovery principles from the traditional paper to the digital context is largely fluid, issues of cost present a potential disjoint. Traditional discovery procedure dictates that the producing party pays the costs of internal preparation for discovery, while the discovering party pays for the costs of copying and transportation. Electronic evidence introduces a more problematic situation. Copy and transportation costs are negligible, but production of the data can be extremely expensive due to the scale of what can be saved-and thereby requested-for discovery.

Further White Paper Details
PublisherHarvard University File FormatHTML
Date PublishedOctober 2000 Downloads7
FormatWhite Papers   
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