Legal
Legal services, technical consultants, and digital evidence
Digital evidence is only useful if it is properly collected, correctly preserved, and integrated into a coherent reconstruction of facts. This section is designed for those working with chats, screenshots, opinions, memos, working documents, and digital acquisitions, offering practical guidelines for locking down contents, contexts, timelines, and prior existence.
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How to reconstruct events chronologically using chats and screenshots
When a situation gets complicated, the difference between a "confused memory" and a "clear sequence" lies in the details you saved. This guide takes you step-by-step to transform chats and screenshots into a solid, readable reconstruction. If you already have material scattered…
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How to prove when digital evidence was properly acquired
In the digital world, having evidence is rarely the issue. The real knot is proving when and how it was acquired. If you want to prevent it from being questioned, you must build a tidy trail from the very first moment. Here is how to do it concretely, starting from what you…
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How to prove the prior existence of a professional opinion
A professional opinion is valued not just for what it says, but for when it was formulated. If you want to avoid arguments over "who thought of it first", you need to clearly establish the milestones. This guide helps you document prior existence practically, starting from the…
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How to document a defence memo in progress
A defence memo is born, grows, and changes shape multiple times before becoming "final". Documenting this journey spares you endless arguments over who wrote what and when. If you are working on a sensitive version, now is the right time to start tracking every step.
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How to collect digital evidence before it gets deleted
In the real world, evidence doesn't vanish on its own: someone deletes it, alters it, or lets it deteriorate. In the digital realm, this happens silently and incredibly fast. This guide helps you intervene immediately, but also to organise yourself as a structured law firm…