Implications of a Jeopardy - Computer Named Watson: Beating Corporate Boards of Directors at Fiduciary Duties, The

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Groves, Roger M.

Issue Date

2012

Type

Journal Article

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

INTRODUCTION|Can my employer look at my e-mails, cell phone calls, instant messages, Facebook, and Twitter accounts over the past two years and know when I lied? Can they know when I edited documents uncharacteristically as part of a cover up? If I am on the board of directors of a corporation, can my e-mails reveal our decision-making anomalies? If so, how does that play out in litigation? Ask Enron executives. Welcome to the world of forensic evidence analytics. While the story of Enron has largely been written, the Enron litigation documents are unwitting sunken treasures that are still being explored. Millions of documents, including five million messages, termed electronically stored information ("ESI"), from the Enron litigation have provided an opportunity for software developers to commence a cottage industry. The industry is forensic examination of ESI to discover trends and make findings as to who did what in the company...

Description

Citation

45 Creighton L. Rev. 377 (2011-2012)

Publisher

Creighton University School of Law

License

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN