Adventures in E-Discovery: Preserve Your Website
A recent New Jersey District Court case established precedent that, when it comes to e-discovery , websites should be treated like all other electronic files. Under this ruling, failing to produce a website that existed at the time the corporation was sued can be grounds for sanctions. Chad Weiner, of the Milwaukee firm Quarles & Brady, recommends that all corporate litigation hold policies have a mechanism in place to be sure that the website is preserved just like all other corporate documents.
Source: E-Discovery Bytes
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