By Christine Taylor, January 9, 2008, 12:10 PM
A few years ago, the Taneja Group coined the term “Information Classification and Management” (ICM) to describe the technology of locating and classifying data throughout the enterprise. ICM covered sub-technology sectors such as e-discovery, compliance, data security control, and data management. However, we saw the term “e-discovery” trump [...]
Filed under: Attorney-client privilege, Business Technology, CIO, ECM, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Federal Rules of Evidence, IT, Legal Technology, Litigation management, Records Management Policies, Regulatory Compliance, Rule 502, White Collar Crime, audit standards, chief legal officers, e-Discovery, email, enterprise content management, in-house counsel, internal investigations, subpoenas | Tagged: Corporate compliance, Corporate governance, Data Privacy and Security, data security, e-Discovery, email, enterprise content management, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Federal Rules of Evidence, general counsel, in-house counsel, inadvertent waiver, Law department management, litigation, Litigation management, records management policy, Regulatory Compliance, Rule 502, Sarbanes-Oxley, White Collar Crime | Leave a Comment »