MENLO PARK, Calif. -- Cataphora Inc. Monday announced the official opening of its newest office, located in Ann Arbor. Cataphora develops software for analysis of individual and organizational ...
People are predictable. Elizabeth Charnock bets her business on it. Charnock, 43, is the founder and CEO of Cataphora, a technology company that tracks and predicts human behavior, often for ...
NEW YORK and REDWOOD CITY, Calif., May 31, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- As companies look to streamline their legal review processes and reduce costs associated with e-discovery, Ernst & Young LLP's Fraud ...
Accounting giant Ernst & Young has acquired the e-discovery division of Cataphora, officials announced Tuesday afternoon. With the acquisition, the London-based Big Four accounting firm's e-discovery ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. When companies do spend the money to ...
(CNN)-- Even the most cunning of slackers may have finally met their match in a new piece of office surveillance software. A program has been developed by U.S. firm Cataphora and "encompasses a large ...
IT IS one of the more unusual cases that Elizabeth Charnock has worked on. Several years ago, Ms Charnock's software company, Cataphora, based in California, analysed the contents of e-mails sent by ...
“How many vendors have you ever heard of suing lawyers and winning?” That’s the question Tom O’Connor brought up when asked about the significance of the Sept. 19 decision in Cataphora Inc. v. Jerrold ...
I can’t say for sure if your customers have moral character, but I can practically guarantee that they each have digital character. “Digital character is this idea that almost everybody these days ...
When asked about their company’s policies for monitoring employees, more than one third of Inc.com business owners say that they do not screen employee computer use in any way. The Inc.com poll, which ...
(CNN)-- Even the most cunning of slackers may have finally met their match in a new piece of office surveillance software. A program has been developed by U.S. firm Cataphora and "encompasses a large ...
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