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December 2005

The Top 10 in Tech

Dominating the news like the world-changer it is, technology was a major character in many of the year’s top news stories, from the subpoenaed e-mails and digital forensics that underlie many headline-grabbing court cases to the hacking of celebrity cell phones. New programs, old problems—technology remains be­hind them all.

Technology continues to work its way into and through the traditional practice of law. Since digital communications have taken over legal practice, lawyers can no longer assume that the old rules regarding issues like attorney-client privilege or document destruction apply.

This year’s top 10 list provides some snapshots of the challenges lawyers face and the technology that can help. Many changes are incremental, not enormous, but they still make a difference in how law is practiced today.

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In This Issue

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Feature Section
  • Taking Control

    Norwood, Ohio, already was bleeding in 1987 when General Motors Corp. pulled the plug on its plant in the Cincinnati suburb, idling more than 4,000 workers and sucking away 35 percent of the city’s tax base.

  • Battle of the Expert

    District Attorney Michael Dugan says his office has but one agenda: to hold accountable those it has probable cause to believe have violated the law.

ABA Connection
  • Feeling a Chill

    Perhaps to some, the unanimous vote by the ABA House of Dele­gates earlier this year in support of the attorney-client privilege and the work-product doctrine may have seemed like a superfluous statement of the obvious.

The National Pulse
McElhaney on Litigation
Ethics
Corner Office
Associates in the Trenches
Solo Network
Career Audit
Ideas from the Front
Life Audit
Tech Audit
Your ABA
President's Message
Executive Director's Report
Report from Governmental Affairs
Above the Trees
Obiter Dicta
Keeva on Life and Practice

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