That instant messages are discoverable information and are slowly taking over email as the dominant form of business communication?
That PSTs with a size of 256kb or less likely have no data in them or are not actual PST containers?
That converting Lotus Notes databases to MS Outlook will lose important metadata and formats?
That estimating page counts based on file-type and file-size is arbitrary and can lead to wildlly inaccurate estimates?
That transporting your sensitive evidence in an unsafe container, like a cardboard box, is ok until that box is dropped on the floor or lands in a puddle?
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 Guidance EnCase images can be opened and mounted by other forensic software’s?
That many of the off-the-shelf eDiscovery programs can not detect the encoding of documents and thus can not properly handle foreign language character sets?
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 Microsoft PPT files have hidden speaker notes that, if not extracted during processing, will not be searchable?
That Microsoft Word 97-2002 documents can contain deleted data hidden within the binary of the file if “allow fast saves” are enabled?
That producing in native format isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be, and sometimes producing in tiff with metadata can be faster and easier?
That copying evidence to DVD or CD without first zipping up the evidence will alter the file-level dates/times of the copied files?
That the European Union’s Directive on Data Protection mandates that any non-EU recipient of EU-based personal data must provide the required levels of privacy protection? Logik is Safe Harbor Certified.
That voice-mails have come into the picture with discovery/records retention?