Blackout's ability to redact quickly – even when managing large volumes – makes it the best choice for complex redaction tasks involving sensitive information. Reduce review time, lower costs, and create workflows that increase accuracy.
Any Industry: Finance, Construction, Mining, Transport, Retail, Telecomms, Real Estate, Education, Insurance, Pharmaceuticals Any Task: Compliance, Litigation Review, HR Matters & Equitable Hiring, FOIA Requests, DSARs, Majeure Disputes, Anonymizing Reports
Any Sensitive Info: PII, PHI, PCI, Account IDs, Dates, Emails, Phone #s, Addresses, Charts, Pivot Table Data, Embedded Objects, Notes/Comments
BENEFITS • Cut time and costs out of reviews with automated redactions • Rule-based redaction allows for versatile application of Blackout to any task requiring markup • Create efficiencies that drive down human error by redacting words, phrases, and text patterns simultaneously • Ensure privileged information is secure while retaining native documents
FEATURES • Seamlessly integrates into Relativity 10+ • Auto-redacts any sensitive information in imaged, native PDF, or native Excel file • Redacts information not visible in the files, including file attachments, meta data, and document notes/comments • Quality check with approval, reject and override options • Mass import/export functions via .CSV file
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There is a YC Backed company [0] that does this for you. Could be worth a look [0] https://clerky.com I would recommend using soemthing from clerky and then getting your own lawyers involved to really nail this down further. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Yeah, just call it a proprietorship until you have a solid reason to incorporate. (i.e. Angel investment and / or liability protection.) Then when you do choose to incorporate, check out clerky.com. Source: over 2 years ago
US guy here (not a lawyer), definitely set up the company first and have written stuff in place for what each founder/dev gets. Team disagreements over a multi-sig or distribution can be a killer and are likely going to be your main issue. Also having a corporate entity (even an LLC) shields you from a lot of liability in the case of a bug or funds lost on behalf of users. You can use even an online service... Source: about 3 years ago
I'm currently looking at several lawfirms, such as Goodwin Procter. I'm also aware of a platform for startups legalwork, clerky.com, but I want to bring on my own attorney through it. Anyone have any resources or recommendations? Source: about 4 years ago
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