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Ralph C. Losey
Shareholder & National e-Discovery Counsel
Jackson Lewis P.C.
390 N. Orange Ave., Suite 1285
Orlando, Florida 32801
407-246-8439
Ralph.Losey@jacksonlewis.com
Practice Areas
Electronic Discovery, Legal Search, Information Technology, Cybersecurity,
Employment Litigation Discovery
Education
University of Florida College of Law, Gainesville, FL, 1979, J.D. Honors
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, 1973, B.A.
Institute of European Studies, Vienna, Austria, 1971-1972
Bar Admissions
1980, Florida
Court Admissions
U.S. District Court, Middle District of Florida
U.S. District Court, Northern District of Florida
U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida
U.S. Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
U.S. Supreme Court
Professional Associations and Memberships
The Florida Bar
Orange County Bar Association
The Sedona Conference (retired)
NIST’s TREC 2015 Recall Track Participant and Team Leader
InfraGard, Orlando Chapter, Board Member
Adjunct Professor of Law
2008-2012: University of Florida College of Law: Introduction to Electronic
Discovery; Advanced e-Discovery Seminar; Online e-Discovery.
Professional Experience
Ralph C. Losey is a shareholder of Jackson Lewis, a national labor and employment law
firm with 52 offices throughout the U.S. and over 800 attorneys. Ralph serves as
Jackson Lewis’ National e-Discovery Counsel supervising all e-discovery activities. He
is also the Shareholder in charge of Litigation Support. Ralph is also the founder of the
independent Electronic Discovery Best Practices group (EDBP.com) and the developer
of his on online training course in e-discovery, e-DiscoveryTeamTraining.com. Ralph is
a frequent speaker at e-discovery conferences worldwide and a leading contributor in
the field of Legal Search and Document Review. His work focuses on the use of
Artificial Intelligence enhanced review to find evidence in Big Data for the resolution of
legal disputes. His contributions to the field include both academic-scientific research,
and litigation applications, such as his role as lead technology counsel for the defense
in the landmark decision by Judge Andrew Peck approving the use of predictive coding,
Da Silva Moore v. Publicis.
Ralph is also the principle author and publisher since 2006 of a popular blog on ediscovery, e-Discovery Team Blog. His influential law blog is generally considered the
leading source of commentary and analysis in the field.
Ralph entered private practice in Orlando in 1980. Prior to becoming a partner at
Jackson Lewis, he was a shareholder of Akerman Senterfitt and founder-chair of its ediscovery practice group. Prior to that he was a shareholder with Subin, Shams,
Rosenbluth, Moran, Losey and Brennan, P.A., where, in addition to practicing law, he
was the firm's IT Director for 15 years.
Ralph has a long history in commercial and employment litigation in both state and
federal court, with an emphasis on technology-related issues, ERISA employment
disputes, and Qui Tam government fraud cases, including one of the largest cases in
government fraud history. Ralph has over 70 published opinions to his credit, including
recently, some of the largest e-discovery cases in the country.
Ralph has unique practical experience as a computer user and programmer going back
to 1978. He has worked with mainframes, minicomputers, Macs and PCs, utilizing all
applications imaginable. He created and designed software in the 1980s, including
various games for his children, and many Internet websites starting in the mid-1990s,
forward to today. Ralph was the first lawyer in Central Florida to have a computer on his
desk, the first to use Westlaw, and the first lawyer in Florida with an Internet website.
Ralph was a pioneer in the field of Computer Law, dating back to the early 1980s where
he developed special expertise in computer database protection, software licensing,
and later, Internet law. Ralph also worked with high-tech start-up companies in the
1990s, where he helped develop a food service database which later became the
industry (IFDA) standard. He now limits his practice to issues related to Electronic
Discovery, Information Technology, Cybersecurity and Employment Litigation.
Awards/Recognition
 Martindale-Hubbell AV Peer Review Rating.
 Legaltech News CIO Innovation Award 2015 Finalist.
 National Institute of Science and Technology TREC Recall Track participant and
team leader 2015.
 First Place in first round of Independently Judged Predictive Coding Study. See
EDI-Oracle Study: Humans Are Still Essential in E-Discovery (LTN Nov., 2013).
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Selected by peers in 2013 and thereafter for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in
America for both “Commercial Litigation” and “Electronic Discovery and
Information Management Law.”
Certified High Technology Mediator, Florida Supreme Court (1989).
Certified Arbitrator, Orange County Bar Association (1989).
Who's Who in American Law (since 1985).
Kroll Ontrack Advisory Board (since 2011).
Published Books On Law and Technology
 Perspectives on Predictive Coding: Computer-Assisted Review and Other
Advanced Search Technologies for the E-Discovery Practitioner, Co-editor and
contributor, American Bar Association, (publication pending late 2015).
 Adventures in Electronic Discovery, West Thomson (2011).
 Electronic Discovery: New Ideas, Trends, Case Law, and Practices, West
Thomson (2010).
 Introduction to e-Discovery: New Cases, Ideas, and Techniques, American Bar
Association (2009).
 e-Discovery: Current Trends and Cases, American Bar Association (2008).
 Your Cyber Rights and Responsibilities: The Law of the Internet, Chapter 3 of
Que's Special Edition Using the Internet, McMillian Publishers 3rd Ed, 1996.
Law Review Articles on Law and Technology
 Predictive Coding and the Proportionality Doctrine: a Marriage Made in Big Data,
26 Regent U. Law Review 1 (2014).
 Mancia v. Mayflower Begins a Pilgrimage to the New World of Cooperation, 10
Sedona Conf. J. 377 (2009 Supp.).
 Lawyers Behaving Badly, 60 Mercer L. Rev. 983 (Spring 2009).
 HASH: The New Bates Stamp, 12 Journal of Technology Law & Policy 1 (June
2007).
Social Media and Internet Websites
 @RalphLosey Twitter – Professional link topics only; 2,930 followers (as of
7/8/15).
 You Tube: Losey Channel – 30 videos and animations created by Ralph Losey
on e-discovery education topics; over 53,000 views.
 e-DiscoveryTeam.com – Professional blog; over 10,000 key industry readers;
see eg. About Page.
 LinkenIn – Over 1,500 connections.
 AIEnhancedReview.com – Predictive coding overview information website.
 BottomLineDrivenReview.com – Document review economics information
website.
 EDBP– E-Discovery Best Practices (all legal areas) information website.
 E-DiscoveryTeamTraining.com – Online training, all areas, introductory law
school level; paid admission only to 75 hours of training.
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eDiscoverySecurity – Cybersecurity issues information website designed for ediscovery practitioners.
HackerLaw.org – Law and culture of ethical hacking information website.
FloridaLawFirm – IT and the Law information website.
LegalSearchScience.com – Predictive coding; scientific aspects, information
website.
PreSuit.com – Project conception for early warning system of employee
misconduct and lawsuit avoidance.
ZeroErrorNumerics.com – Quality control methods for document review,
information website.
Recent Interviews Available Online
 Radio interview about quality assurance method, ei-Recall.
 2014 Video of "Google Hangout" video panel discussion on Cybersecurity and
Law Firms by Michele Lange.
 2014 Interview on e-Discovery Trends by Doug Austin.
 2013 LegalTech Video Interview for LTN on Outsourcing by Monica Bay.
 2013 LegalTech Interview on e-Discovery Trends by Doug Austin.
 Ralph Losey and Judge Shira Scheindlin on ESIbytes.
 April 2012 interview, audio and edited transcript, on general topics, rules and
best-practices.
 Video interview at Legaltech 2012 on predictive coding.
Select Articles on Legal Search and Review
 Form Plan of a Predictive Coding Project. Detailed Outline for project planning
purposes.
 Two-Filter Document Culling – Parts One and Part Two.
 Introducing “ei-Recall” – A New Gold Standard for Recall Calculations in Legal
Search – Parts One, Two and Three.
 In Legal Search Exact Recall Can Never Be Known.
 Visualizing Data in a Predictive Coding Project – Parts One, Two and Three.
 Latest Grossman and Cormack Study Proves Folly of Using Random Search For
Machine Training – Parts One, Two, Three, and Four.
 The “If-Only” Vegas Blues: Predictive Coding Rejected in Las Vegas, But Only
Because It Was Chosen Too Late. Part One and Two.
 IT-Lex Discovers a Previously Unknown Predictive Coding Case: “FHFA v. JP
Morgan, et al”.
 Beware of the TAR Pits! Parts One and Two.
 PreSuit: How Corporate Counsel Could Use “Smart Data” to Predict and Prevent
Litigation.
 Less Is More: When it comes to predictive coding training, the “fewer reviewers
the better” – Parts One, Two, and Three.
 My Basic Plan for Document Reviews: The “Bottom Line Driven” Approach, PDF
version suitable for print, or HTML version.
 Relevancy Ranking is the Key Feature of Predictive Coding Software.
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Why a Receiving Party Would Want to Use Predictive Coding?
Comparative Efficacy of Two Predictive Coding Reviews of 699,082 Enron
Documents. (Part Two).
A Modest Contribution to the Science of Search: Report and Analysis of
Inconsistent Classifications in Two Predictive Coding Reviews of 699,082
Enron Documents. (Part One).
Introduction to Guest Blog: Quick Peek at the Math Behind the Black Box of
Predictive Coding that pertains to the higher-dimensional geometry that makes
predictive coding support vector machines possible.
Keywords and Search Methods Should Be Disclosed, But Not
Irrelevant Documents.
Reinventing the Wheel: My Discovery of Scientific Support for “Hybrid
Multimodal” Search.
There Can Be No Justice Without Truth, And No Truth Without Search
(statement of my core values as a lawyer explaining why I think predictive coding
is important).
Three-Cylinder Multimodal Approach To Predictive Coding.
Robots From The Not-Too-Distant Future Explain How They Use Random
Sampling For Artificial Intelligence Based Evidence Search. Video Animation.
Borg Challenge: Report of my experimental review of 699,082 Enron documents
using a semi-automated monomodal methodology (a five-part written and video
series comparing two different kinds of predictive coding search methods).
Predictive Coding Narrative: Searching for Relevance in the Ashes of Enron in
PDF form for easy distribution and the blog introducing this 82-page narrative,
with second blog regarding an update.
Journey into the Borg Hive: a Predictive Coding Narrative in science fiction form.
The Many Types of Legal Search Software in the CAR Market Today.
Georgetown Part One: Most Advanced Students of e-Discovery Want a New
CAR for Christmas.
Escape From Babel: The Grossman-Cormack Glossary.
NEWS FLASH: Surprise Ruling by Delaware Judge Orders Both Sides To Use
Predictive Coding.
Does Your CAR (“Computer Assisted Review”) Have a Full Tank of Gas?
Analysis of the Official Report on the 2011 TREC Legal Track – Parts One, Two
and Three.
An Elusive Dialogue on Legal Search: Part One where the Search Quadrant
is Explained, and Part Two.
Random Sample Calculations And My Prediction That 300,000 Lawyers Will Be
Using Random Sampling By 2022.
Predictive Coding Based Legal Methods for Search and Review.
New Methods for Legal Search and Review.
Perspective on Legal Search and Document Review.
The Legal Implications of What Science Says About Recall.
Reply to an Information Scientist’s Critique of My “Secrets of Search” Article.
Secrets of Search – Parts I, Part II and Part III.
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Judge Peck Calls Upon Lawyers to Use Artificial Intelligence and Jason Baron
Warns of a Dark Future of Information Burn-Out If We Don’t.
The Information Explosion and a Great Article by Grossman and Cormack on
Legal Search.
Select Legal Articles on Other Topics
 The Legal Protection of Computer Databases, Florida Bar Journal (1991).
 The Meaning of De Novo Review in ERISA Law, Trial Advocate Quarterly
 (1991).
 Bruch Creates Split in Circuits On Standard of ERISA Appellate Review, The
National Law Journal (1991).
 Protecting Your Intellectual Property, Profit Magazine (IBM - 1992).
The following select Articles are listed in reverse chronological order from June 2015
to 2010. They all pertain to e-discovery topics other than Legal Search and Review
and were published by and available at e-DiscoveryTeam.com.
 e-Disco News, Knowledge and Humor: What’s Happening Today and Likely to
Happen Tomorrow.
 Introducing a New Website, a New Legal Service, and a New Way of Life / Work;
Plus a Postscript on Software Visualization and Thanks to Kroll Ontrack.
 Information → Knowledge → Wisdom: Progression of Society in the Age of
Computers.
 My Hack of the NSA and Discovery of a Heretofore Unknown Plan to Use Teams
of AI-Enhanced Lawyers and Search Experts to Find Critical Evidence.
 500th Blog – End of One Era, Beginning of Another.
 Hadoop, Data Lakes, Predictive Analytics and the Ultimate Demise of Information
Governance – Parts One and Two.
 e-Discovery Industry Reaction to Microsoft’s Offer to Purchase Equivio for $200
Million – Parts One and Two.
 Is the IRS’s Inability to Find Emails the Result of Unethical Behavior? New
Opinion by U.S. Tax Court Provides Some Clues – Parts One and Two.
 What Can Happen When Lawyers Over Delegate e-Discovery Preservation and
Search to a Client, and Three Kinds of “Ethically Challenged” Lawyers: “Slimy
Weasels,” “Gutless,” and “Clueless.”
 Caveat Emptor – Beware of Vendor Trickery.
 Select Should Lawyers Be Big Data Cops?
 Browning Marean: The Life and Death of a Great Lawyer.
 Jones Day Attorney Misconduct Shows Rotten State of Obstructionist Discovery
in America.
 Hacking Flash Trading on Wall Street: From Fiction to Fact in Just Three Weeks
 The “If-Only” Vegas Blues – Parts One and Two.
 Richard G. Braman: 1953 – 2014.
 U.S. Employees Are Weakest Link In America’s Cybersecurity – Parts One and
Two.
 The Importance of Cybersecurity to the Legal Profession and Outsourcing as a
Best Practice – Parts One and Two.
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National Institute of Standards and Technology Creates Cybersecurity Standards
Framework.
The CIA Cyber Security Triad and 9ec4c12949a4f31474f299058ce2b22a.
HEARTBLEED: A Lawyer’s Perspective On Cyber Liability and the Biggest
Programming Error in History.
Fears and Loathing (and Pain) in Seattle: a Case Lesson in How NOT to
Implement a Litigation Hold and Search for Email – Parts One and Two.
What If You Had To Choose Between Not Taking Depositions and Not Doing eDiscovery?
Lawyers as Legal-Fortune Tellers.
Judge John Facciola Exposes Justice Department’s Unconstitutional Search and
Seizure of Personal Email.
Best Practices in e-Discovery for Handling Unreviewed Client Data.
Growing Importance of Non-Litigation Services in Electronic Discovery Law.
Scientific Proof of Law’s Overreliance On Reason: The “Reasonable Man” is
Dead, Long Live the Whole Man - Parts One, Two and Three.
The Psychology of Law and Discovery.
The Ongoing Battle of David and Goliath in the Legal Profession.
Top Ten e-Discovery Predictions for 2014.
Announcing My Top e-Discovery Case of 2013.
A Robot and a Lawyer Walked into a Bar.
Seven Years of the e-Discovery Team Blog, Art to Science, and the Launch of
“LegalSearchScience.com” and “ediscovery.com.”
Judge Grimm’s New Discovery Order Is Now An e-Discovery Best Practice –
Parts One and Part Two with a Postscript to Vendors on “Legal Software of the
Future.”
Youth Dominated “Innovate Conference” Gives Us Hope for the Future.
Party Ordered to Disclose Where and How It Searched for ESI: You Can Expect
This Kind of Order To Become Commonplace.
Personal Invitation to the Innovation “Tech-Law” Conference in Orlando.
Poor Plaintiff’s Counsel, Can’t Even Find a CAR, Much Less Drive One.
The Solution to Empty-Suits in the Board Room: The “Hacker Way” of
Management – Parts One and Two.
The Hacker Way” – What the e-Discovery Industry Can Learn From Facebook’s
Management Ethic.
Select Proposed Amendments to the Rules: the “Easy to Read” e-Discovery Only
Version.
Rapid Change in Legal Review Technologies Reveals “Empty Suits” in Charge of
Most Legal Software Companies.
$3.1 Million e-Discovery Vendor Fee Was Reasonable in a $30 Million Case.
Spoliation Sanctions: The Tide is Turning, Goliath is Smiling.
Courts Struggle With Determining Reasonability of e-Discovery Vendor Bills.
Fishing Expedition Discovers Laptop Cast into Indian River.
Electronic Discovery Best Practices Update.
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Keywords and Search Methods Should Be Disclosed, But Not Irrelevant
Documents.
Wrath of Kahn Continues.
Robots From The Not-Too-Distant Future Explain How They Use Random
Sampling For Artificial Intelligence Based Evidence Search.
Robot Games: the Gamification of Legal Review.
Confessions of a Trekkie.
Robots With A Story To Tell.
Bad Robot!
Another Clawback Enforcement Order Shows the Importance of the Selection of
Quality Vendors.
Judge Waxse Enforces His Model Clawback Order.
The Increasing Importance of Rule 26(g) to Control e-Discovery Abuses
Job Market Heating Up for e-Discovery Technologists, Managers, and Attorneys
Five e-Discovery Wishes for a Happy New Year!
WRECK-IT RALPH: Things in e-discovery that I want to destroy!
Oral Hold Notice Invalidated as “Completely Inadequate” such that it “Borders on
Recklessness.”
Attorneys Admonished by Judge Nolan Not to “Confuse Advocacy with
Adversarial Conduct” and Instructed on the Proportionality Doctrine.
Announcing the e-Discovery Team’s Second “Clever Words Award” for
Excellence in Judicial Opinion Writing.
Going “All Out” for Predictive Coding and Vendor Cost Savings.
Jason Baron’s Keynote Speech — “Boldly Going Where Few Judges Have Gone
Before: The Emerging Case Law on Software-Assisted Document Review and
Our Next 5 Year Mission.”
7th Circuit Pilot Program on e-Discovery.
Select A Day in the Life of a Discovery Lawyer in the Year 2062: a Science
Fiction Tribute to Ray Bradbury.
Select E-Discovery Gamers: Join Me In Stopping Them.
Litigation, e-Discovery, e-Motions, and the Triune Brain.
Blogging, Proportional Review and Predictive Coding.
“Where The Money Goes” – a Report by the Rand Corporation.
Good, Better, Best: a Tale of Three Proportionality Cases – Parts One and Two.
Judge David Waxse on Cooperation and Lawyers Who Act Like Spoiled Children
Ethics of Electronic Discovery – Parts One and Two.
Evidentiary Objections to Email are Key to BP Oil Spill Case.
Impactful, Fast, Bold, Open, Values: Guidance of the “Hacker Way.”
Storytelling: The Shared Quest For Excellence in Document Review.
Spilling the Beans on a Dirty Little Secret of Most Trial Lawyers.
“Winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing” – Examining the new trend towards
big e-discovery cost awards for winners.
We Are at the Dawn of a Golden Age of Justice.
What Do You Think? (Your Secrets Are Safe Here).
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One Man’s Trash is Another Man’s Evidence: Why We Don’t Need New Rules,
We Need Understanding, Diligence, and Enforcement of Existing Rules.
Case Where IT Tech’s Fast-Talk Had Zero Persuasive Value with Judge..
GhostSurfer Wipe Out Leads to Jail Order Sanctions.
Deduplication Defense Dodges Sanctions.
Discovery of Widespread Illegal e-Discovery Dooms the Media Empire of Rupert
Murdoch.
Announcing the e-Discovery Team’s “Clever Words Award” for Excellence in
Judicial Opinion Writing.
Hackers Perfect Indestructible Virus and Assemble Army of Four Million Zombie
Computers.
On Vacation and Can’t Attend an Important Meeting? Use a Robot Stand-in!
Lulzsec Disbands After 50 Days of Cyber Mayhem Funny Business.
Does Your Stated Password for a Website Somehow Relate to the Theme of the
Website? Who Knows Your Password? Who Are “LulzSec”? Should We Fear
Them Or Laugh With Them?
News on Victor Stanley II – Judge Garbis Affirms Amount of Judge Grimm’s
$1,049,850.04 Sanction.
Going “Gaga” Over Big Deals and Malpractice in e-Discovery.
The Information Explosion and a Great Article by Grossman and Cormack on
Legal Search.
The Word is Out: e-Disco is the Hot New Dance.
e-Discovery Education and Certification.
e-Discovery with Extreme Prejudice: the Bin Laden Project.
Top Ten e-Discovery Issues by Judge Andrew Peck and David Lender.
Ruminations on James Gleick’s New Book “The Information,” Chaos, Life and eDiscovery.
Judge Refers Defendant’s e-Discovery Abuse to U.S. Attorney for Criminal
Prosecution of the Company and Four of Its Top Officers.
Another “Fox Guarding the Hen House” Case Shows the Dangers of SelfCollection.
In Search of Quality: Is It Time for E-Discovery Search Process Quality
Standards?
Government Appeals and Seeks a Stay of Judge Scheindlin’s FOIA Order on
Metadata in NDLON v. ICE.
NY Times Discovers e-Discovery, But Gets the Jobs Report Wrong.
New Opinion by Judge Scheindlin on FOIA, Metadata and Cooperation.
Rethinking Relevancy: A Call to Change the Rules to Narrow the Scope of ESI
Relevance.
Discovery As Abuse.
An Old Case With a New Opinion Demonstrating Perfect Proportionality.
The Law Firm Apprenticeship Tradition And Why Most Lawyers Are Still
Untrained in e-Discovery.
Are Today’s CLE Programs Doomed to Go the Way of the Newspaper?
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Kroll’s Annual Report: Same-Old, Same-Old. So What Are We Going To Do
About It?
Magistrate Judge in NY Says Verbal Hold Notice May Be Ok and Questions the
Value of Proportionality.
“Win-At-All-Costs” Litigation Using Illegal e-Discovery Leads to Dismissal of a
Billion Dollar Case.
Clawbacks: Trick or Treat?
What is Wrong, or Right, with e-Discovery in America?
Beware of the ESI-discovery-tail wagging the poor old merits-of-the-dispute dog.
“Victor Stanley 2″ – Judge Grimm Imposes Prison Sanction for Spoliation by a
Defendant Reminiscent of the Leader of “The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot
Straight.”
Good News? Bright Line Emerges On When To Pull Lit-Hold Triggers.
America’s Got e-Discovery Talent: Judging the Hot Cases of 2010 – Parts One,
Two and Three.
Survey of 103 e-Discovery Cases in the First Half of 2010, the "Campbell Soup"
case, and the Wisdom of Andy Warhol.
The Poetry of e-Discovery: People Not Only Make Mistakes, They Lie, Steal,
Cheat and Fake.
People Make Mistakes.
The-times-they-are-a-changin’ is a feeble excuse for disregard of duty.
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: “Mt. Hawley Ins. Co. v. Felman Production,
Inc.”
My Homage to Judge David J. Waxse and Kansas City.
What Can Happen When Lawyers Delegate Their e-Discovery Duties to a Client.
E-Discovery Metrics – One of the Four Pillars of e-Discovery.
Judge Rosenthal v. Judge Scheindlin: A Bogus Battle.
Affordable, Quality e-Discovery Is Not Attainable Without Teamwork and
Cooperation.
The Trials and Tribble-ations of the Data Deluge.
The Multi-Modal “Where’s Waldo?” Approach to Search and My Mock Debate
with Jason.
Why Online Education Will Surpass Traditional Face-to-Face Education in the
Next 5-10 Years.
Baron and Losey’s New Movie: “e-Discovery: Did You Know?”
My Talk with Karl Schieneman on Cooperation, Speaking French, Who’s On
First, Zen and the Art of e-Discovery Specialization and Malcolm Gladwell.
Raising the Bar – Judge Scheindlin Defines Gross Negligence in Spoliation..
Child’s Game of “Go Fish” is a Poor Model for e-Discovery Search.
Plato’s Cave: why most lawyers love paper and hate e-discovery and what this
means to the future of legal education.
The Chimney Sweep Boy and the Goldsmith: the Ancient Origins of the Doctrine
of Spoliation.
Inside the Head of a Digital Pirate.
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Textbook Case of Discovery Abuse Exposes a Fallacious “Pig in a Poke”
Defense.
Law Firms Threatened by Fat Chameleons.
There Can Be No Justice Unless Lawyers Maintain High Ethical Standards.
e-Discovery Competence is a Fundamental Ethical Challenge Now Faced by the
Legal Profession.
Eight Years of Imminence – Utah Court Mines Safe Harbor Rule 37(e) Into
Oblivion – Parts One and Two.
Inspector Clouseau and the Insights of Judge Facciola and Malcolm Gladwell
Suggest a Bright Future for e-Discovery Lawyers.
The Grilling by Mary Mack – Angry Ostriches, Judge Scheindlin, Malcolm
Gladwell, Jack Nicholson, Pretend Lawyers, Volunteers for America, and a Tad
More! – Parts One and Two.
Flat Earth Society Admits World is Round, Wants to Learn to Circumnavigate.
Jason Baron on Search – How Do You Find Anything When You Have a Billion
Emails?
Should You “Go Native”?
IT Workers Read Your Personal Email and U.S. Law is Generally OK with That.
How To Practice Law Like Abraham Lincoln – Be an e-Discovery Lawyer!
D.C. Appeals Court Affirms Order Requiring a Non-Party to Spend $6 Million, 9%
of its Total Annual Budget, to Comply with an e-Discovery Subpoena.
Are We the Barbarians at the Gate?
Hundredth Blog: Thoughts on SEARCH and Victor Stanley, Inc. v. Creative Pipe,
Inc.
The Lessons of Qualcomm: A Wake Up Call for the Legal Profession.
What Game Does an e-Discovery Team Play?
Who’s On First? – New Case Repeats the Classic Miscommunications Between
Law and IT.
Sherlock Holmes in the Twenty-First Century: Definitions and Limits of Computer
Forensics, Forensic Copies and Forensic Examinations.
Classes/Seminars
There have been too many to list. From 2007 to 2014 Losey lectured at least once a
month, often at several events a month on multiple e-discovery topics. Lectures were to
attorneys, judges, paralegals, students, engineers, corporations, governments, and
technology groups at CLEs and e-discovery conferences and seminars around the
country. In 2104 Ralph began to significantly reduce his speaking schedule. He now
only accepts a few keynote invitations per year with priority given to engagements
outside of the U.S. As of mid-2015 his current preferred speaking topics are: The Future
of the Law, AI-Enhanced Big Data Search and Review, Predictive Coding
Methodologies, and Cybersecurity.
Personal
Married to Molly Friedman Losey since 1973
Two Children: Adam Losey and Eva Losey-Grossman
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Member of Interlachen Golf and Country Club, Winter Park
Primary Charities: Negro Spiritual Scholarship Fund; Rollins College; IT-Lex
Recreation: Golf, two French Bulldogs, video gaming and reading
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