During trial, the court learned that Qualcomm and its counsel did not produce more than 200,000 pages of relevant electronic documents. As a result, Qualcomm was ordered to pay Broadcom's hefty legal fees ($8.5 million)...This is, according to e-discovery expert Adam Sand, one of the heaviest e-discovery fines. And although this might be 'old' news by now, I think that it is still highly relevant. Cases of such gross negligence are hard to come by, but it does prove that it can happen. And 8.5 million is a lot.
Covering the latest in Email Archiving, Records Management, and e-Discovery.
About Me
- Chris Pham
- Chris works for Autonomy Corporation - the innovative leader behind meaning-based computing.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Qualcomm v. Broadcom
We've been swamped over here lately, but while you are waiting in eager anticipation for the next post, check out Law.com's revisit of the 3 year old Qualcomm Inc. v. Broadcom Corp.
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