They are mining records from e-pass cards to tell when individuals entered building, offices, etc. and other items such as emails.  Most large hospitals have an IT department that is capable of running queries to obtain email exchange items and actually have program that monitor for something out of the ordinary just as part of day to day business, which may include emails or transactions.  image

As a human, we interpret how we remember something, cameras and data just show the pictures or the data trails.  This particular company has it’s focus set on pharmaceutical companies, medical-device-makers, hospitals, and physicians. 

“Lawyers in big cases can handle one or more terabytes of electronically stored information. One terabyte is roughly equivalent to about 75 million pages of data.”

To handle the expertise required, lawyers are now hiring technology experts to assist in the task.  Again, as mentioned most companies and hospitals have monitoring and audit trails in place; however in special cases that perhaps go beyond email, the facility may not have the forensic forces available to audit and investigate the terabytes of information relative, thus here comes the legal teams, all set up with the folks to run the “algorithms” against the collected data to get down to the facts.  Lawyers like algorithms too.  BD

Lawyer Don Wochna and his partners are betting there's big money in tracking data generated by the ever-expanding universe of electronic devices people use to e-mail, telephone, pay highway tolls, or simply navigate from one place to another.

Wochna's company, Vestige Ltd., specializes in mining data created by these so-called microprocessors for telling tidbits of information on behalf of law firms, health-care institutions, government agencies, and others.

Often, their clients are contemplating a lawsuit - or themselves fear they are about to be sued.

What Wochna and his colleagues are trying to do is to position themselves atop a vast mountain of electronic evidence that parties to litigation or other forms of dispute-resolution are increasingly trying to tap to gain the upper hand.

Firm tracks evidence generated by e-devices | Philadelphia Inquirer | 02/01/2009

1 comments :

  1. Lawyers really do excellent job. And that is why I really appreciate them for doing things so well. Lawyers are intelligent and do have a high wit. That’s is why lawyers required long years to study on their profession because it is a tough job.

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