OBJECTIONS WHEN AND HOW RAISED TO OPPOSING COUNSEL’S DISCOVERY DEMANDS IN A SPECIFIC FORMAT
The format of discoverable material holds relevance when it is electronically stored information (ESI). The treatment of metadata is of basic concern. Metadata is described as “information that provides information about other data”. It describes things like the source of the information – who, when and how it was created, modifications to the information if any, etc. It may contain information that is visible to any viewer and also may contain any hidden information. At times, metadata may contain information that is privileged. In cases involving many parties, more money, voluminous data, it may be critical to prove an allegation or defense or to prove that the information has been spoliated. This can be effectuated through unchanged metadata. Materials provided in native-format also assist in this endeavor. Native format allows electronic evidence to be preserved without degradation.
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure generally require the discoverable Document review company to be produced to the other party in the form in which it is ordinarily maintained by the producing party (“native format”) or in a usable form. To produce ESI in native format is to produce the information in the same electronic format in which it existed with the producing party.