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 you can fit approximately 2.7 million single page TIFF images on a 200GB hard drive?  That’s a lot more than you can fit in a bankers box.

  • That you can easily reduce the amount of information to review by doing a domain name analysis on your data (e.g. remove all @amazon.com )?

  • That removing near duplicate documents without first reviewing them could risk missing important information?

  • That printing electronic files to paper is, in many cases, totally unnecessary and wasteful?

  • That Mozilla Thunderbird emails can be easily processed by most eDiscovery applications?

  • That Bloomberg email systems keeps attachments disconnected from the actual email and in a compressed .tar.gz file?

  • That search terms generally miss over 50% of would-be relevant content according to TREC?

  • That documents have multiple dates and usually the file system level dates (e.g. Last Accessed Date) are bad due to copy issues?

  • That lots of useful and searchable content is missed by search engines because they do NOT perform OCR on the documents?

  • That Microsoft Outlook doesn’t actually compress data, so how can it possibly expand after processing?

  • That early case assessment (ECA) is a buzzword that means a myriad of different things depending upon who you are talking to?

  • That if you redact a document, you should re-OCR the document before producing the text of that document?

  • That right-clicking on a file in Windows will alter the Last Accessed Date?

  • That Microsoft Exchange (.edb) databases can be easily opened by a variety of software products?

  • That Microsoft XLS files can contain hidden spreadsheets?