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July 10, 2009, Houston, TX.
Michael Geske, Aphelion’s
COO, is participating as a Topic Authority in TREC Legal Track 2009. TREC is
the Text Retrieval Conference, sponsored by the National Institute of Standards
and Technology, an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce, in cooperation
with the Department of Defense. Each year’s program presents a set of tasks to
vendors of litigation document searching products and evaluates their
performance. The exercise is intended to develop industry best
practices and articulate standards for evaluating search and retrieval methods.
The tasks are modeled on real life circumstances that arise when litigants face the task of collecting, processing, reviewing, and producing large amounts of electronically stored information, taking
into account The Sedona Conference
Best Practices Commentary on the Use of Search and Retrieval Methods in
E-Discovery. The project’s significance has been judicially recognized:
[T]here
is room for optimism that as search and information retrieval methodologies are
studied and tested, this will result in identifying those that are most
effective and least expensive to employ for a variety of ESI discovery tasks.
Such a study has been underway since
2006, when the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), an agency
within the U.S. Department of Commerce, embarked on a cooperative endeavor with
the Department of Defense to evaluate the effectiveness of a variety of search
methodologies. This project, known as the Text Retrieval Conference (TREC),
evolved into the Trec Legal Track, a research effort aimed at studying the
e-discovery review process to evaluate the effectiveness of a wide array of
search methodologies.
This evaluative process is open to
participation by academics, law firms, corporate counsel and companies
providing ESI discovery services.... The goal of the project is to create
industry best practices for use in electronic discovery.
This project can be expected to identify
both cost effective and reliable search and information retrieval methodologies
and best practice recommendations, which, if adhered to, certainly would
support an argument that the party employing them performed a reasonable ESI
search, whether for privilege review or other purposes.
Victor Stanley Inc. v. Creative Pipe, 250 F.R.D. 251, 260 n.10 (D. Md.
2008). Additional information on TREC Legal Track is available here.
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