Showing posts with label mobile attorney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobile attorney. Show all posts

Friday, 2 October 2009

3BView Surveys the Legal Market on Mobile Device Usage and Document Security

Following on from my post last week, we at 3BView are conducting a survey on the usage of mobile devices in the day-to-day practice by legal practictioners around the world. The survey focuses on access to, and usage of, business applications from mobile devices in particular access to documents and risks associated with information contained within document metadata via such applications.

We will be publishing summary results on our website, with full results available to survey partcipants. Survey participants also will be entered into a drawing to win an upgraded phone of their choice – either a Blackberry Storm 9530 or an iPhone 3GS 32GB.

Access the survey at http://www.zoomerang.com/Survey/?p=WEB229PNSVQD9C from now until Otober 23, 2009.

More details can be found here.

Friday, 25 September 2009

The Risks and Benefits of Mobile Computing

More and more solo and small firm practitioners are making the most of the advancement in technology to practice law using mobile devices and remote applications. The launch over the last few months of the latest iPhone and Blackberry Storm has been another leap forward in enabling technology.

Not only does mobile technology assist attorneys in managing their client base, it also helps in lowering their business overhead. Mobile devices enable attorneys to work from anywhere. The term ‘Mobile Attorney,’ while meaning a specialization in the past, now relates to the practice of using mobile technology to conduct business.

One of the key aspects of the Mobile Attorney is that they no longer just have a laptop running Microsoft Windows. They are now accessing their email, documents and other business applications via webmail, mobile enabled Document Management Systems (DMS) and a broad array of devices such as Blackberry, iPhone, PDAs, NetBooks and Apple Macs.

But, this brings up an interesting fact. While being a Mobile Attorney has many significant benefits, it does introduce new security risks, especially where the firm's security tools, such as their metadata removal application, is limited to a desktop tool. The Mobile Attorney using the web, DMS or mobile device does not have access to these tools and so fall foul of what I refer to as 'the mobile security gap'. If you are a Mobile Attorney – are you aware of these risks and are you doing anything to make sure you and your data is protected?