PART II of IV: The Impact of Predictive Coding on Contract Review
Attorneys
This is the second of four blogs on predictive coding
that I will be posting. This first entry focused on how the technology
and use of predictive coding has changed and where exactly it stands in the
industry today. This second entry discusses the impact predictive coding
has had on contract review attorneys. The
Third will cover case law on the topic. Finally, the fourth will provide some
predictions about what the future holds for predictive coding.
I am writing these blog entries
in part due to my participation in the upcoming ACEDS conference, where I will
be speaking on a panel about Information Governance. This four part blog
series will appear in the conference material as a part of that panel. If
you are interested in the field of eDiscovery and pragmatic discussions about
eDiscovery issues framed in the context of real life situations involving real
people, I suggest you consider attending the conference, which will be held in
Hollywood Beach, Florida, April 27-29. Additionally, I believe the ACEDS
eDiscovery certification is a worthwhile endeavor and certification. If
you would like more information about it, it can be found on the ACEDS website (www.aceds.org), or feel free to contact me
as well.
About two years ago, I succumbed to the notion that
predictive coding was the future in the eDiscovery industry (which was actually
fairly accurate) and that this potentially meant trouble for contract review
attorneys and their jobs (which has not proven to be true thus far). Click here
to read my article on the subject from two years ago. I was
not the only one to succumb to this, and even those outside the eDiscovery
industry picked up on it, including the New York Times in a 2011 article by John Markoff,
but I must now admit I was wrong and I was being too short sighted.
Two years later and two years wiser (I hope at least!)
and document review and contract review attorneys are still common in the
eDiscovery industry, and arguably have not been impacted much by predictive
coding. Why is this? In part because of when and if predictive coding is used: predictive
coding, although much more accepted and utilized than it was two years ago, is
still not universally used. In my post last week, I briefly discussed some of the reasons for this (cost, trust, human time,
sensitivity/importance of the material, objection from the opposing party). Also in part because of how it is used. In practice,
predictive coding is often employed as a method to prioritize documents or to
cull documents, but not as a complete review eliminator; common predictive
coding workflows prioritize the responsive material to the front of the review
but do not remove documents from the review population, or they may act to cull
and remove some, but not all, of the data, leaving the remaining to still be
reviewed.
Despite this, there is no doubt that predictive coding is
used and reasonably often. Since the
advent and adoption of predictive coding, the underlying framework of
litigation in US courts has not changed and litigants and subpoena recipient’s need
to produce material pursuant to discovery obligations continues, and hence the
need to cull that data in a defensible and reasonable manner still exists. Predictive coding technology has become an
entrenched part in this and is viewed as a reliable and acceptable tool by the
industry now more than ever.
So if the tool that was designed to reduce document
review is viewed as viable and is being used, why isn’t document review being
reduced? The answer is that it is in
fact being reduced, but not from what it was, rather it is being reduced from
what it would be absent the technology; year over year numbers may not
decrease, but if the technology were not being used, current numbers would be
greater than last years and greater than what they are using predictive coding
technology.
The fact is that data continues to grow
exponentially. One of my clients who is
very proactive in their approach to eDiscovery, who is sophisticated and
knowledgeable, and who is using predictive
coding, is still reviewing the same if not more data per custodian than they
were in previous years, even when using predictive coding, because the amount
of data they preserve, collect, and search continues to rapidly grow; the new
technology, although effective, is only allowing them maintain the status quo,
if that. Without the technology, they
would be faced with an unmanageable amount of data to review/produce (at least
from a cost perspective). As an aside, another
way that people are tackling big data is via information governance, including
how to store less, collect less (searching pre-collection is increasingly a
buzz topic), getting data off legal holds etc.
Big data and information
governance will be the topic that the panel I am on at the annual ACEDS conference
at the end of April will speak to.
What this glut of data means for contract review
attorneys, is that even when there is approval and budget and acceptance of
predictive coding technology and its use, there is still a place and need for
document review and review attorneys.
Moreover, for the document reviewers, the technology has not changed
their role or needed skill set much either.
Predictive coding generally adds a step to the process that takes place
prior to contract review attorney involvement, and thus, by the time a review
attorney is brought in, the process and what they are doing is very much what
it has been as of late.
I fully expect predictive coding to continue to push the
envelope and gain more and more acceptance and traction in the industry,
however I do not see that translating into the extinction of document review or
review attorneys. I continue to think
the larger and more real threat to document review comes from things like law
schools producing a greater supply of attorneys then the market demands, as
well as the proposed changes to the FRCP, and the sentiment those changes embody;
corporations are saying enough is enough we need to scale back eDiscovery and
the FRCP are a way to do that.
I and others were not wrong that predictive coding would
have an impact on the legal industry, we just underestimated how much data
growth would negate much of that impact, and in turn, we overestimated the impact
of predictive coding on contract review attorneys, who, as it turns out, are
not going anywhere for the time being.
Very interesting read. Makes me wonder how it could affect things like electronic discovery for litigation services.
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