The Lexbe Blog is a hub for eDiscovery best practices, industry insights, and company news and events. By default, blog posts display by publish date in order of most to least recent. If you’d like to filter by category or by content tag(s), you may do so using the selectors below.

Mobile Device Forensic Collections
Mobile devices are everywhere. Within the last decade or so, smart phones have become not only a staple in our society, but arguably a necessity. There are two major players in the smartphone game, Android and Apple.

12th Annual LDO Survey Finds Legal Departments are Relying More on AI for eDiscovery
The 12th annual Law Department Operations (LDO) survey found that effective use of technology in law departments has been slow to accelerate. Artificial intelligence has been wildly growing among several markets, but is just beginning to saturate the legal market–however, it is expected to continue.

ABA Law Technology Research Center Features Lexbe in the Litigation Support Chart
The ABA LTRC has a resource chart available to members and non-members that compares major eDiscovery providers on the market as a resource for attorneys. The detailed categories include general description, product/license pricing with target market firm size, software compatibility, presentation features, OS compatibility, searching/language support and technical support.

eDiscovery Buyers Guide Reviews Lexbe
Brett Burney (Burney Consultants LLC) and Chelsey Lambert (Lex Tech Review) have teamed up to publish the 2019 eDiscovery Buyers Guide to help solo, small and medium-sized firms find the best eDiscovery solutions to meet their needs.

eDiscovery Buyers Guide Interviews Lexbe CEO, Gene Albert
Brett Burney interviews Gene Albert from Lexbe at Legaltech / LegalWeek 2019. They discuss how the Lexbe platform serves a variety of litigation scenarios for law firms of all sizes as well as in-house legal departments.

Mobile eDiscovery is a Challenging But Critical Part of Your Evidence Gathering Strategy
It is estimated that in the US alone, there are 396 million mobile device subscriber connections. That calculation suggests that there are approximately 1.2 connected devices for every person in the US. As the number of devices continues to grow, the amount of data traffic is through the roof — up to 13.7 trillion megabytes in 2017.
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