Each year we ask a selection
of IT law and legal technology experts for their predictions for the coming
year. This is the fourth installment of interesting and challenging predictions
from nine further contributors, including Professor Richard Susskind OBE and SCL
Trustee Clive Davies.
From Simon Briskman, a partner in the Technology Law Group at Field
Fisher Waterhouse LLP: www.ffw.com
US corporations will lobby Europe to simplify privacy laws, allowing smarter Web
advertising. We will also see new Web 2.0 entrants causing valuation jitters for
current platform owners. Joost and other peer-to-peer solutions will spread,
whilst applications such as BBC iPlayer will drive ever higher bandwidth
requirements. Reliability of web resilience, security and speed will become key
issues and Sarbanes Oxley, MiFID and other regulation will continue to add
complexity and maturity to the outsourcing model.
From Chris Dale, consultant specialising in litigation support and
e-discovery:
www.chrisdalelawyersupport.co.uk/
A judge strikes out a Statement of Case because the party has failed to comply
with the disclosure requirements of the Practice Direction to Part 31 CPR. The
Court of Appeal upholds the decision, finding that the judge acted
proportionately and within his management powers.
Corporate clients routinely require litigation teams to identify their
e-disclosure strategy when pitching for work.
Law firms advertise for ex-litigation lawyers to work on disclosure exercises
from home.
The government announces that the investment in the civil courts, promised to
show results by 2002, is now in place and is seen as a priority.
From Clive Davies, Senior Counsel at Fujitsu Services and SCL Trustee:
www.uk.fujitsu.com
2008 will be the year when community based software evolves from the gaming
world and MMORGS (World of Warcraft and Star Wars) and from social networking
and leisure sites (Facebook and Second Life) to being useful business tools
which will foster and promote online communities within law firms and their
clients.
From Paul Heritage-Redpath, Solution Architect, IRIS Legal Solutions:
www.iris.co,uk/legal
Commercial Landscape
As Professor Susskind continues to ask what lawyers are for, how is the IT
industry which supports them bearing up?
If the future looks bleak for the small general practice firm, it is bleaker
still for the small family businesses providing IT. The small firm market is
only going to shrink - that's the publicly stated aim of legal aid reform - and
while the canny niche sole practitioner may have the time and vision to assemble
their own IT from low-cost open source packages, vendors servicing the small
business market won't have the investment to keep abreast of the increasing
speed of innovation and the move to software as a service whilst migrating
legacy Win32 application customers.
Front Office
Design guru Stephen Bayley said: ‘style has many definitions but one I like is
“the prospect of happiness”.’ Traditional legal support software has tended to
be a keyboard-driven list manager. Lawyers have traditionally disliked
keyboards. Will this be the year we see a handheld utilising AJAX to display
appointments, proactively time record them - and VOIP calls - automatically,
show KPIs, record and despatch dictation and then display the transcribed
results as an email attachment? After all, the application most loved by lawyers
has been mobile e-mail on Blackberry. The iPhone shows that mobile interfaces
can actually be pleasurable to use. Asus have delivered a £200 solid-state
device offering the key business functions of WP, VOIP and Internet access in a
usable form.
If such a mobile device were lost, its account could be cancelled remotely
avoiding data loss concerns (ever more pressing since the recent HMRC faux pas).
Web-based applications can be updated piecemeal with zero downtime, in-house IT
costs would be slashed and vendors could explore alternative pricing models for
use, putting small law firms on the same footing as the majors.
As we move slowly into the era of the semantic web, perhaps we will at last see
CRM that allows businesses to exploit the social graph (pace Tim Berners-Lee).
This could be the canny consultant's angle of choice in 2008. How about contacts
on that handheld being synchronised with the firm's CRM and pushed out so
relevant details appear prior to meetings: ‘How's your boy's football going?’
Certainly Microsoft's investment in Facebook's fluid collaboration interface
points the way to future developments in Groove and Sharepoint collaborative
working tools.
Back Office
For transactional work, XML will continue to grow in importance as solid work by
PISCES and LiST/EDRM begins to pay off in the face of increased government
pressure for cost reduction in conveyancing and dispute resolution respectively.
SQL 2008 offers transparent encryption to respond to data privacy concerns and
synchronisation support for mobile working. Don't expect products taking
advantage of it in the year of its release, but this is one to watch.
Zafar Kahn, CEO of RPost: www.rpost.com
In May 2007 there was a US Federal Court opinion in which the issues of
admissibility of e-mail into evidence came to light. In this court opinion, all
of the printed e-mail evidence was discarded by the judge because neither party
could authenticate the e-mail content or transmission meta-data (Lorraine v
Markel). In the US market, this has sparked an increase in awareness of issues
surrounding e-admissibility -- the sent folder, archive, or printed e-mail
provides only a statement of what the sender ‘claims’ to have sent and provides
no verifiable proof of whether, when, or what was in fact received by the
recipient. We believe this trend of awareness around authentication of e-mail to
ensure admissibility into evidence will become an issue in the UK legal market
in 2008.
From Rob Lancashire, Sales & Marketing Director, nFlow:
www.nflow.com
Throughout 2007 the digital dictation market has become increasingly
competitive. This will undoubtedly drive vendors to develop technology solutions
that add significant value to a firm through innovative functionality.
Specifically within the dictation arena a hive of activity around mobile
dictation solutions including the Blackberry and Windows Mobile Clients is
anticipated. As firms increasingly face pressures to be efficient, effective and
proactive, any solutions that can further enable fee earners will be of real
benefit. In addition investment in .NET technologies and the advantages that
this platform promises will be fundamental to the long-term prospects of any DDS
solution.
Paul Longhurst, Consultant, 3Kites Consulting:
www.3Kites.com
Last year, I predicted that knowhow would become a focus for many firms, and I
think this has been the case although with varying success for the suppliers I
noted (Recommind certainly had a good year and look set to build on this in
2008). Another area I mentioned was hosted IT, which didn’t quite come to
fruition in the way I imagined but rather under the guise of outsourcing. This
was certainly a key topic at June’s event in Portugal and I would anticipate
outsourcing gaining ground in the next 12 months.
I think that the impending deregulation of ownership will see a number of law
firms starting to gear up either to meet the challenges that this presents or
simply to make themselves more attractive to the queue of potential suitors that
will arrive at the sector’s door. This is likely to take the form of increased
efficiencies derived from BPM tools such as Metastorm, Visualfiles and Flosuite,
and may also see the introduction of document assembly in some quarters with
suppliers like Exari considering interesting options for this part of the
market.
Nigel Murray, Managing Director, TRILANTIC:
www.trilantic.co.uk
Law firms are now able to analyse vast amounts of multi-lingual documents in the
language they wish, rather than employing local translators. A rise in
automated, mass translation tools will be evident. The most important drivers
will be that human error and misunderstanding are negated as is the need for
short-term resources when specific cases arise.
Speed to disclosure, risk management and confidence will therefore be improved
as irrelevant data can be identified and removed quickly. Firms can take on
multinational cases more effectively and ultimately pass this benefit onto their
clients.
From Professor Richard Susskind OBE:
www.susskind.com
My advice to lawyers and law firms everywhere is to take Web 2.0 very seriously
indeed in 2008. We are entering a new era of Internet activity, one that will
directly affect the daily working lives of legal practitioners. The impact on
the legal profession of social networking and online collaboration will be
profound. I am more confident about this than I was, in 1996, when I said that
the Internet would transform the communication habits (e-mail) and
information-seeking habits (the Web) of lawyers. In 2008, we will see the
beginnings of the legal world embracing Web 2.0.