This Palgrave Pivot identifies the key legal, economic, and policy issues surrounding the allowance to use and interpret electronic data consistently and in a scientifically valid manner in U.S. courts. Evidence based on the analysis of large amounts of electronic data ("Big Data") plays an increasing role in civil court disputes, providing information that could not have been obtained from a witness stand. While Big Data evidence presents opportunities, it also presents legal and public policy challenges and concerns. How can one be sure that deviations found in Big Data fall outside the norm? If statistical analyses can be conducted and presented different ways, how can judges and juries make sense of conflicting interpretations? When does Big Data extraction stop being investigative and instead become an invasion of privacy? This book traces the history of Big Data use in U.S. courts, couples current case studies with legal challenges to explore key controversies, and suggests how courts can change the way they handle Big Data to ensure that findings are statistically significant and scientifically sound.
Author(s): Dwight Steward, Roberto Cavazos
Series: Palgrave Advances In The Economics Of Innovation And Technology
Publisher: Palgrave Pivot
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 89
Tags: Law And Economics, Big Data Analytics
Front Matter ....Pages i-vii
Data Analytics and Litigation (Dwight Steward, Roberto Cavazos)....Pages 1-7
History of Data Analysis in US Courts (Dwight Steward, Roberto Cavazos)....Pages 9-19
Examples of Litigation Involving Big Data Analytics (Dwight Steward, Roberto Cavazos)....Pages 21-55
The Courts as Gatekeeper of Big Data Evidence (Dwight Steward, Roberto Cavazos)....Pages 57-67
Indirect Use of Big Data Analytics in US Courts (Dwight Steward, Roberto Cavazos)....Pages 69-74
Future Challenges and Recommendations (Dwight Steward, Roberto Cavazos)....Pages 75-84
Back Matter ....Pages 85-86