On your mark, get set, Zoom: Starting off right in collaboration app e-discovery

Zoom, and other video conferencing and collaboration apps, have become ubiquitous in today’s new workplace. A side effect of this is that legal counsel are seeing, first-hand, the information generated in these platforms and its relevancyto their e-discovery matters. But extracting information from applications such as Zoom, and loading it into formats that work within review platforms, can be a difficult and nuanced undertaking.

While methods for dealing with e-discovery in Slack and other messaging platforms are becoming incrementally more effective, video conferencing adds another layer of complexity. Organizations that use Zoom may have chat, video recordings, transcripts and other individual aspects of meetings, all created and stored independent of each other, perpetuating within a single platform.

While inherently challenging, and uncharted territory for most legal teams, Zoom data actually brings a tremendous opportunity to enrich e-discovery. A robust source of information—and now the primary means of communication for many organizations and teams—Zoom can actually lead to more dynamic e-discovery. Once teams establish a standard for how to collect, process and analyze data from these tools, it’s possible to begin bridging gaps in information to better understand the context and facts of a case.

Below are a list of considerations lawyers can start exploring to get a handle on the role of collaboration tools and Zoom in their broader e-discovery landscape. These will help teams get off to the right start and more easily tap into emerging apps as they come into scope in legal matters.

In recent conversations with my colleagues, in-house legal teams and outside counsel, it’s become clear there is growing recognition that collaboration tools are now pertinent sources of information for litigation and investigations. This trend will continue as Zoom adoption grows and new applications proliferate. While it’s true that this shifting data landscape comes with a new set of challenges, it also brings opportunity. When legal teams can get a handle on e-discovery workflows for emerging data sources, they can begin to enrich their understanding of a case and allow the data to speak for itself.

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