Company:Daticon EED
The current logo of Daticon EED, Inc. | |
Type | Privately Owned |
---|---|
Industry | Electronic discovery |
Founded | 1987 |
Founder | John H. Jessen |
Headquarters | Kirkland, Washington , United States |
Key people | Tom Haug, President |
Products | Electronic discovery services and software, Process consulting |
Parent | Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe |
Website | Official website |
Daticon EED, Inc., formerly known as Electronic Evidence Discovery, Inc., is a pioneer in the electronic discovery industry. Since its founding in 1987 by John H. Jessen, the company has contributed to many innovations in the industry and significantly expanded its service offerings and altogether worldwide presence.
It is headquartered in Kirkland, WA with regional operations in Chicago , New York City , Connecticut, Washington, D.C., California and the United Kingdom.
History
John H. Jessen founded Daticon EED in 1987 to address the need for electronic evidence discovery after a lawyer hired him to examine a home computer.[1] Since its founding, the company has been responsible for many industry firsts in the field of electronic discovery, including forensic collection software in 1987 and an online review application in 1994.
In February 2008, Daticon EED formed a partnership with IBM to provide process design consulting and corporate litigation readiness services to IBM customers and reactive services for individual outsourced litigations. Daticon EED has also developed an eDiscovery process manager for IBM's Electronic Content Management (ECM) platform[2] on top of IBM's Filenet P8 platform.
In June 2008, EED acquired[3] Daticon LLC, a Connecticut-based provider of early case assessment, electronic discovery, consulting and archive services and changed its brand name to Daticon EED.[4]
Industry Involvement
Daticon EED is the founding sponsor of both the Electronic Document Retention and Production workgroup and the International Electronic Information Management Discovery and Disclosure workgroup of the Sedona Conference.
Launched in May 2005, the Electronic Discovery Reference Model (EDRM) project was created to deal with the lack of standards and guidelines in the electronic discovery market. Daticon EED participates in the following EDRM projects:
- EDRM Metrics: To provide a standard approach and a generally accepted language for measuring the full range of electronic discovery activities.
- EDRM XML: To develop an XML schema to facilitate movement of electronic information from one stage of the electronic discovery process to the next, one software program to the next, and one organization to the next.
References
- ↑ Gregg, Deirdre (July 12, 2004). "Seattle company stays a leader at searching computers for litigation information". Puget Sound Business Journal (Seattle). http://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/stories/2004/07/12/smallb1.html.
- ↑ "Electronic Evidence Discovery Introduces eDiscoveryProcess Manager for IBM ECM Platform". AllBusiness.com. February 4, 2008. http://www.allbusiness.com/legal/civil-procedure-attorneys-fees/6625508-1.html.
- ↑ "Electronic Evidence Discovery, Inc. Completes Purchase of Daticon, LLC". Thomson Reuters. July 8, 2008. https://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS165864+08-Jul-2008+BW20080708.
- ↑ "EED Merges Brands With Daticon Subsidiary". Northwest Innovation. http://www.nwinnovation.com/eed_merges_brands_with_daticon_subsidiary/s-0019594.html.
External links
- The Electronic Discovery Reference Model Project (EDRM)
- IM, Facebook and Twitter open new areas of discoverable ESI[yes|permanent dead link|dead link}}]
- Electronic Document Storage And E-Discovery: A Way Forward
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daticon EED.
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