Tuesday, November 12, 2024

12th Annual Florida E-Discovery Conference Coming


The University of Florida Levin College of Law will hold their 12th Annual E-Discovery Conference February 12-13, 2025. Hard to believe it's been a dozen years since this program created by Professor Bill Hamilton, renowned for providing practical, actionable education with real-world solutions related to electronic discovery, began. Forward-thinking national speakers present strategies that can be implemented at both law firms and corporate legal departments. Roundtables will commence in pre-conference sessions beginning February 11th. Leading organizations are forming committees, budgeting resources, performing research, conducting pilots, and beginning early implementations for generative artificial intelligence and new rules may be needed. Keeping pace with changes and making new connections in the industry are benefits of attending. Of course, the annual judicial panel with unique insights into courts handling these issues is not to be missed! Free online, as well as an in-person attendance option available.  See more here-- https://ufediscoveryconference.com/


 

Friday, January 12, 2024

Learn the latest in E-Discovery!

Next month, the University of Florida's 11th Annual E-Discovery Conference takes place both virtually and in person on February 28 & 29, 2024. Panels will address challenges for complex cases and provide key takeaways that you can put into practice. The conference is centered squarely around practical education for matters of ESI and is perfect for lawyers and legal professionals of all levels. Spread over two full days, it’ll be a combination of several short talks, panel discussions with live Q&A, and product videos. The participants learn about decisions on electronic discovery with proportionality, BYOD, search terms and TAR, and issues in emerging technologies leading the way, including Artificial Intelligence and prompt engineering in AI. Also of interest are off-the- shelf programs such Slack and Microsoft Teams, as well as programs designed and tailored for specific industries or companies, are now ubiquitous. Collaboration programs produce diverse types and versions and large volumes of data located in multiple locations on myriad of devices, including ephemeral or fragile data.  As always, the case law panel will tackle the key decisions from this past year with a goal of providing practical takeaways. Register here-- https://reg.conferences.dce.ufl.edu/basic/1400090225