Redaction Terms

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By participating in the Logik Redaction giveaway, entrants agree that Logik and their designees and assignees and all of their respective officers, directors, employees, representatives and agents shall have no liability and entrant will indemnify, defend and hold Logik harmless from any liability, loss, injury, or damage to entrants themselves or any other person or entity, including personal injury, death or damage to personal or real property, to entrant or any other person or entity due in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, by reason of the acceptance, possession, use or misuse of the prize or participation in this Giveaway (wow, that’s a long sentence).  Entrants further acknowledge that said parties have neither made nor are in any manner responsible or liable for any warranty, representation or guarantee express or implied, in fact or in law, relative to the prize, including, but not limited to, its quality or fitness for a particular purpose.  Logik is based in the US, so entrants must be 21 years of age or older, sorry kids.  Entering the giveaway multiple times does not improve your chances, sorry winos. Entrants must submit a valid email address that associates them with the eDiscovery industry.

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Like Red Wine?

Enter to win a hard-to-get bottle of Logik Redaction, our very own and quite tasty red Zinfandel. Each month we will give away 1 bottle.

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Did you know?

  • That it would take a team of 1,000 attorneys 100 years to review a petabyte of information?

  • That converting documents to TIFF might actually save you more time and money depending on your case?

  • That the Microsoft Windows operating system has a 254 character limit on the length of a filepath and name, but Linux operating systems do not?

  • That Lotus Notes databases (.NSF) can contain non-email related content, like customer complaint forms and inventory records?

  • That it will take a team of 10 reviewers ~500 days to review 10,000,000 documents, assuming 2,000 documents/reviewer/day?

  • That Microsoft PPT files can contain hidden information behind text objects or layered pictures?

  • That voice-mails have come into the picture with discovery/records retention?

  • That Lotus Notes has a soft delete option that activates when you open a NSF and it will automatically delete emails marked with soft delete?

  • That copying 5GB of tiny files is much slower than copying 1 large 5GB file?

  • That MS Excel documents can have charts layered on top of each other, hiding potentially relevant data?

  • That many early case assessment tools (ECA) will miss crucial embedded objects, hidden metadata, and OCR text?

  • That retrieving passwords by asking the person who created the password is usually much faster than trying to break it with software?

  • That corporate blog entries/twitters are already entering the eDiscovery landscape as discoverable?

  • That rich text and html emails can contain white-on-white text?

  • That PSTs with a size of 256kb or less likely have no data in them or are not actual PST containers?