About

Ralph Losey 2024

About Ralph Losey and this blog. Here is Ralph’s latest attorney resume (April 2024). Here is a page describing some of Ralph’s books, awards and such. Here is a complete list of his articles. If you would like to contact him concerning a legal matter, please do so via email at ralph at losey dot law. You can also find him on Linkedin and a few other social media sites.

Ralph created this blog in 2006 to advocate for a team approach to electronic discovery, where lawyers, technologists, scientists, educators, vendors and other experts would work together. He started work for a large national law firm in 2010 supervising e-discovery in thousands of law suits. His team approach and use of machine learning became accepted doctrine in the law by 2019. Ralph then took a break from writing and public speaking for a few years to focus on his legal practice and active machine learning skills in e-discovery and refine his free online training machine learning, TAR Course.

Ralph retired from Big Law in 2022 to practice law with his son, Adam Losey, and daughter-in-law, Catherine Losey, at their law firm, Losey PLLC. At that point he returned to writing again, energized and eager to embark on new law, technology and other challenges.

The e-Discovery team blog has since undergone a transformation, as you can see in the posts. Artificial Intelligence “entities” of all kinds are now part of our team. We use Artificial Intelligence to connect the dots between e-Discovery, which has now become synonymous with discovery, and other fields of law, and life itself. This blog still focuses on technology and the law, as that is Ralph’s primary expertise, but is evolving fast as the technologies finally go into the exponential stages of innovation. To learn more about the core ideas driving our expansion and reinvention, see Ralph’s related information webs, AI Ethics and Hacker Way, and his YouTube Channel.

AI generated watercolor painting of Ralph Losey

One of Ralph’s sayings as a lawyer is to take your work seriously, but not yourself. This blog, including his videos and cartoon animations, some of which are shown on the right column of this blog, were all created in that spirit. The same goes for his many books and law review articles. See the blog Writings page for a complete list of Ralph’s writings.

When not writing and researching about Ai, Ralph’s day job is service as a lawyer in private practice with Losey, PLLC. He also serves as a certified Arbitrator for the American Arbitration Association or privately upon agreement.

About Ralph’s Work. Ralph first began using computers in law school in 1978. His practice has always combined the latest computer technologies with legal services, primarily in the areas of civil litigation. See his resume for a full statement of his legal background. From 2003 to 2022 Ralph’s legal practice, writings, speaking and research was done in the environment of Big Law. In 2010 his specialty in e-discovery started to focus on the use of Artificial Intelligence, specifically active machine learning, to search large quantities of  data to find evidence needed for the resolution of law suits

Upon the release of ChatGPT 3.5 in November 2022, Ralph’s interest in Ai was renewed. These were the smart computers that he had been waiting for since 1978. He has devoted a substantial portion of his professional time since November 2022 on study, research, experimentation, writing and speaking on LLM Generative Ai. This includes Ai assisted computer coding and the creation of new writings, illustrations, animations and videos. In late 2023 Ralph also started creating OpenAI ChatGPT applications, including his Visual Muse app to helps GPT4 users create visual images, which can be found in the OpenAI Store and are distributed without charge or add-on gimmicks.

AI created image Ralph Losey in the style of Picasso.

Bottom line, Ralph is one of the country’s most active practitioners and educators on generative Ai prompt engineering, a hands-on user, aka ethical “hacker” type, not just a writer, teacher and lawyer-arbitrator.

If you want to dig even deeper into his background there is still more information on the right column of this blog, including a short bio and recent interviews. But Ralph says the best thing to do is just read his blog. The contents are what matter, not the personality.

****** IMPORTANT ******

Legal ethics require Ralph Losey to insist that you look at the important disclaimer and notice about this blog. It is Ralph’s own creation, not his firm’s, past or present. It contains Ralph Losey’s personal views, not necessarily his law firm or anyone else. The e-Discovery Team blog provides education, information, and editorial opinions only, not legal advice.  It is certainly not an ad nor solicitation to provide legal services. No legal advice is provided here.

Ralph Losey Copyright 2024. – All Rights Reserved

80 Responses to About

  1. molly losey says:

    YOU ROCK.

  2. Chuki Obiyo says:

    very resourceful!

  3. sam solomon says:

    just found this resource. a really good job. thanks sam

    are you going to sedona end of april? if you are we can meet then. sam

  4. Alex says:

    Thank You

  5. Rob Robinson says:

    Excellent insight and instruction – thank for the time invested in this useful resource.

  6. Heidi Maher says:

    This is a very informative and insightful blog. Definately one to put on your favorites and check everyday. Thanks for shedding light on complex issues.

  7. Joanne says:

    Enjoy your blog. I am very experienced in complex litigation/e-discovery work and I must note that I have not yet seen a discussion of the best ways to properly prepare a client for all the tech supprt necessary to actually conduct the large scale doc review (# 6) above. This process requires hiring from 30 – 100 + attorneys to work 60+ hours a week for months on end on large scale projects. This is a very labor intensive and expensive phase of e-discovery. It has been my experience that the software programs/vendors/consultants/servers/internet pipelines etc. etc. are poorly chosen (cost) causing serious delays and cost over runs on many projects. I also note that so called service providers in this area often employ very junior and inexperienced people to serve as “techs” and ‘on-site trainers’ who are not really up to the task of servicing the daily needs of complex project workflow. I understand that clients make cost driven choices in these matters but they wind up paying far more in the end in excessive attorney hours and overtime because they don’t properly prepare for the review phase.

  8. Ralph Losey says:

    You raise a good issue. Any thoughts on how to do that would be appreciated. Many people, and cos, seem to be penny wise and pound foolish. Most of the expense in large projects is review, and I have tried to make that point several times.

    • Terry Dexter says:

      Are tool vendors aligned more towards a particular type of litigation (e.g., patent vs. civil rights vs. contract)? If so, that would be one means to categorize. The next method I suggest is to qualify each tool by the type of algorithm used. For example, a simple text search would be given a low score while an AI based tool capable of conducting semantic searches would be given a high value.

      Then again, we still have to deal with stegongraphy, OCR conversions and the odd extremelylongrunonsentencethatdescribestheinnerworkingsofapatent.

  9. Rohit Retharekar says:

    Each process is explained thoroughly. Clears all doubts about e-discovery. Good job done

  10. Frank says:

    Wow. Fantastic flow charts. Your use of visuals here was better than most of the text books I read, let alone blogs. Thanks a million for putting in the time here.

  11. Mike Cummins says:

    Very informative website and appropriate. As a representative on the IT side of the house, I can confirm that cost is a big push-back on bringing attorney review technology platforms in house and for companies that are involved in a relatively small number of litigations (say once per year), the cost of maintaining expertise in operating those platforms is also of concern.

    IT departments quite easily fall into the trap you describe of over collection not really understanding what happens once turned over for review. Even the in-house managing attorney is not cognizant of the cost of over collection. Outsourcers (both technology and outside counsel) are usually all too happy to get terrabytes of ESI to justify exorbitant review costs.

    I have done some research into attorney review platforms that can be used in-house and I’m curious if you have any experience with any of those. As it’s an emerging product space, there are wide gaps in offerings and costs and I’m looking to narrow the field down by leveraging others’ experiences.

    Thanks for your posts!

  12. How does one subscribe to your blog? You are dead on. With being in the industry, I enjoy hearing others views to validate what I have learned thus far. Keep these coming. Have a great and most successful day.

  13. Amy Lechner says:

    Ralph, thank you for the insight and resource of your blog. I wonder if you would consider setting up and RSS feed (strictly for the ease of your readers)?

    Be well,
    Amy

  14. Ralph,

    Your blog represents the depth of your understanding of e-discovery on the whole.

    What is more important is to make sense to the reader. I am new to e discovery and did derive immense knowledge and pleasure by reading your article.

    Great job!

    regards
    balaji

  15. Nice job on the blog!

    I am a records management expert credentialed in medical records (HIM or Health Information Management) and specialize in Legal Health Records and eDiscovery in healthcare. I live near Orlando (Titusville) and thought I should reach out and make a connection. A friend of mine Kim Baldwin-Stried Reich speaks highly of you. When you have a chance please e-mail me at the e-mail address I posted with this message. Thank you.

  16. Kim Gist says:

    Do you have a web feed I can save? I searched around but couldn’t

  17. Farab says:

    Enjoy your blog. I am very experienced in complex litigation/e-discovery work and I must note that I have not yet seen a discussion of the best ways to properly prepare a client for all the tech supprt necessary to actually conduct the large scale doc review (# 6) above. This process requires hiring from 30 – 100 + attorneys to work 60+ hours a week for months on end on large scale projects. This is a very labor intensive and expensive phase of e-discovery. It has been my experience that the software programs/vendors/consultants/servers/internet pipelines etc. etc. are poorly chosen (cost) causing serious delays and cost over runs on many projects. I also note that so called service providers in this area often employ very junior and inexperienced people to serve as “techs” and ‘on-site trainers’ who are not really up to the task of servicing the daily needs of complex project workflow. I understand that clients make cost driven choices in these matters but they wind up paying far more in the end in excessive attorney hours and overtime because they don’t properly prepare for the review phase.
    +1

  18. […] concept. Ralph Losey has been talking about it for years over on his groundbreaking and irreverent e-discovery team blog, and it’s a frequent topic of keynote speakers on the e-discovery lecture circuit. However, […]

  19. […] encourage you to check out Ralph Losey’s excellent summary of this case for more insight and hilarious facts about the ruling: Victor […]

  20. Kimbas says:

    Where I can get technical insight about e-discovery?
    1) How generally people do the extraction of attachments of a document? msgs of a PST… and have them ready for viewing?
    2) How to have high fidelity rendering of the documents? (Are there any on the fly trasnformation of the files for viewing them or this is done at processing time.

  21. […] companies, including H5, Bluestar, D4, and Lighthouse, but they have caught the attention of Ralph Losey, who is a well-known expert in e-discovery. His blog, e-Discovery Team, is one of the most […]

  22. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of the world of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  23. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  24. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  25. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  26. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of the world of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  27. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  28. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  29. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  30. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  31. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  32. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  33. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  34. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of the world of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  35. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  36. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  37. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  38. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  39. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  40. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  41. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  42. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  43. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  44. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  45. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  46. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  47. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  48. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  49. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  50. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  51. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  52. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  53. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  54. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  55. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  56. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  57. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  58. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  59. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  60. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  61. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  62. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  63. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  64. […] Losey. Losey and his e-Discovery Team are staples of a universe of electronic discovery. Losey is a Partner and […]

  65. […] of Sensei Enterprises, Inc. and John W. Simek, Vice President of Sensei Enterprises welcome Ralph Losey, a partner in the law firm of Jackson Lewis and a nationally known expert, author and lecturer on […]

  66. […] Ralph Losey’s role will be as the Magistrate Judge, defense counsel will be Martin T. Tully (partner Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP), with Karl Schieneman (of Review Less/ESI Bytes) as the litigation support manager for the corporation and plaintiff’s counsel will be Sean Byrne (eDiscovery solutions director at Axiom) with Herb Roitblat (of OrcaTec) as plaintiff’s eDiscovery consultant. […]

  67. […] Ralph Losey is a lawyer in private practice with a background in litigation and computers since 1979. He is a Partner of Jackson Lewis, LLP, and the firm’s National e-Discovery Counsel. Ralph has limited his practice to e-discovery law since 2006.  Read more … […]

  68. […] This article originally appeared on Ralph Losey’s e-Discovery Team blog. […]

  69. […] of the resources that many of us in the litigation support industry follow is Ralph Losey. He is very knowledgeable about our world of litigation support and how we fit into the process of […]

  70. […] And both come with the highest of “street creds”.  Ralph is the National eDiscovery Counsel and a Shareholder of Jackson Lewis, a computer hacker (white hat only), author of e-DiscoveryTeam.com blog, a maven at software and the search and review of electronic evidence using artificial intelligence, etc., etc.  For a nice bio click here. […]

  71. […] contributors also include Craig Ball, Ralph Losey, and John Tredennick. Brett Burney provided the following advice regarding the importance of […]

  72. […] Technology (NIST). TREC brings together academics and software developers (along with our friend Ralph Losey) to try different algorithms and approaches against a standard set of documents. Although some tout […]

  73. Great blog and informative to the nth degree.

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