Are Enterprise Content Management failures destroying the American system of justice?

By Doc | March 29, 2010, 7:05pm PDT

Summary: As if dying trees and disgruntled employees aren’t bad enough consequences of poor enterprise content management systems, according to Michael Hickins, lousy Enterprise Content Management (ECM) could be chipping away at the very heart of American justice.

photo: plu.edu

photo: plu.edu

As if dying trees and disgruntled employees aren’t bad enough consequences of poor enterprise content management systems, according to Michael Hickins, lousy Enterprise Content Management (ECM) could be chipping away at the very heart of American justice. This talk of justice and ethics makes me a little lightheaded, so I’m going to let Hickins speak for himself:

The shabby state of most enterprise content management implementations, combined with lady Justice’s thirst for electronic documents, has made it so that “only the rich and Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) can afford to litigate,” in the words of attorney Ralph Losey, who specializes in legal applications of technology.

Losey, whom I met at a conference sponsored by EMC (NYSE: EMC) Corporation, decried what he called “extortion by discovery demands,” which forces most defendants to simply settle their lawsuits rather than spend huge sums to defend themselves. It doesn’t have to be this way, he said, but “the failure of business to adopt enterprise content management is destroying the American system of justice.”

“There’s enterprise and there’s content but there’s no management,” he quipped.
Most companies, or at least those with a functioning legal department, now realize that courts expect them to make all forms of electronic communication available to their opponents during the pre-trial process called “discovery.” That includes not only email but instant messages, blogs and any other relevant documents — electronic and otherwise (hence the term “e-discovery”).

And that’s where it starts getting dicey, of course — what’s the definition of relevant, and how do you find it?

Hickins goes on to explain how this problem can be solved:

According to Losey, vendors need to do a better job of explaining text analytics and other sophisticated applications that can do a better job of narrowing the haystack, which could save a lot of money. Currently, he said, “there’s a huge disconnect between technology and our dispute resolution system.”

The bigger disconnect, of course, is between our expectation of proper corporate citizenship and the shareholder-value-driven culture that permeates most companies, and in many cases creates the incentive for fraud. This isn’t something we can cure through legislation–at least not entirely.

We’re going to have to start demanding ethical behavior from companies, and using our pocketbooks to punish those that transgress. As a society, never mind an economy, we can’t afford to continue throwing litigation dollars down the drain. And imagine how much money could be saved on parsing documents if companies knew they had nothing to hide.

What are your thoughts, Doc readers?

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ZDNet introduces Doc (The DocuMentor), sponsored by RICOH. Through his blog, Doc will educate you about Document Management. So who is Doc? Doc is something of an enigma. He was born to a Russian ballerina and a German electrical engineer who some believe was running covert operations for shadowy corporate interests. Doc grew up in various locations in the United States, although no one seems to know precisely where, least of all Doc. His early schooling was unremarkable except for the time he was caught trying to replace all the mimeograph machines with high-tech color copiers that had mysteriously disappeared from a shipment to Albania. At MIT, he made a name for himself by transforming a large printer into a robot that hunts and eats Roombas. Professionally, he reportedly has seen the insides of more brands, versions, and generations of printer and printer-related hardware than almost anyone. Some say his obsession with paper, printing, and mechanical movement was either started by, or evidenced by, a traumatic childhood episode when he crawled inside an old Xerox 2400 and tried to print himself.

Anyway, Doc has hands on experience with stuff like printer maintenance and fleet management, but his mastery of document management leaves no stone unturned. Important issues like sustainability, security, and regulatory compliance are top of mind for Doc, as are other business technology needs like networking and IT services, making him a true blue IT renaissance man.

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RE: Are Enterprise Content Management failures destroying the American system of justice?
3shao 19th Sep
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What about the paper people?
needfeed Updated - 1st May 2010
The paper industry would sink like a rock without drawn out trials and all that goes with them. What would happen to the paper industry, and the paper recycling industry. Oh yeah and stories for people to write about guys that work for so called paper companies but are really secret agents. Computers can only store so much information before you have to print it out to show someone the facts or provide documentation. The average person that can afford it could just view it on their smart phone or other device but it seems we can't set all our digital devices to self destruct after we get an e-mail detailing some secret mission and we know we all can't afford these these devices like we can paper but maybe the paper will soon be embedded with the technology because Moore's Law is correct and that it's not far fetched. Stop making so many inferior products when we know the technology is far superior to that available to the average consumer you are just wasting resources and creating modern day slaves out of the population. Unless you would like to give me a job of my own creation and make up the rules as I go along and hand out money to people who don't really need it.
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