I’m on a crusade to underscore the need for lawyer competence in that crucial “e” that precedes “e-discovery.” It’s no longer enough to understand the law in isolation; today’s lawyer must understand some fundamentals of information technology and electronic evidence. My efforts often prove quixotic, as everywhere I’m met with the attitude that electronic discovery isn’t a lawyer’s concern: “It’s something you hire people to do,” they say.
Certainly, we must hire people to do things we cannot possibly do. But I contend that we hire people to do many things we could learn to do ourselves, and do economically. Remember Eddie Murphy’s royal backside wipers in Coming to America? All it takes is money to burn; and if it’s someone else’s money, who really cares?
But at what point do lawyers outsource themselves into superfluity? Clients can hire vendors. Bigger clients can and should bring much of…
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