If you missed it last year, you’ll want to hurry this year! The 2026 UF Law E-Discovery Conference is just a few weeks away!
The 13th(!) annual UF Law eDiscovery Conference conducted by the University of Florida Levin College of Law (UF Law) is a two-day conference that offers both virtual and in-person participation. It provides adaptable references, playbooks, case-law snapshots, mock demos, checklists, and more, to evaluate and tailor to your facts, policies, and jurisdiction. The aim is simple: help you spot openings, fill gaps, and contribute where strategy is set.
The 2026 UF Law eDiscovery Conference is scheduled for February 25th and 26th. Each day has a specific focus, as follows:
- Day 1 (February 25) concentrates on how evidence informs strategy, budgets, negotiations, and timelines across roles. We discuss recent decisions and what they mean. Modern sources take center stage: M365, Slack, mobile, and cloud, plus explainable AI methods with clear validation language. Throughout the day we explore practical ways to recognize openings on real teams and position your skills where decisions are made.
- Day 2 (February 26) looks ahead to admissibility of AI-generated evidence and discuss the e-discovery professional’s role. We continue with people-and-practice topics: collaboration patterns, ethics, and communication frames that maintain momentum without adding risk. Our Nuts & Bolts session provides concise takeaways and actionable insights. We conclude with our 1st annual off-campus reception for in-person attendees to connect with speakers, sponsors, and peers.
The preliminary agenda is available here for you to check out.
As always, there will be short “nuts & bolts” sessions on both in-person days. As the graphic above notes, I’m honored and excited to participate again in the conference speaking at the session titled Important Trends Driving eDiscovery Practices in 2026 at 1pm ET on February 25th! Step into the future of eDiscovery with me for a rapid-fire look at trends from eDiscovery Today’s State of the Industry Report, covering everything from generative AI breakthroughs to discovery of modern data sources to key business trends and much more!
Want CLE? You got it. The 2026 UF Law eDiscovery Conference is offering 795 minutes of total CLE, with 335 ethics credits minutes, 60 mental illness awareness credits and 500 technology credits minutes!
You can register here for the 2026 UF Law eDiscovery Conference for either in-person or virtual. There is a significant limit to the number of in-person attendees, so if you want to attend in-person, you’d better hurry (Note: I’m assuming that you still can register for in-person since the form to do so is still available).
The 2026 UF Law eDiscovery Conference promises once again to be the best conference of the year for terrific speakers talking about eDiscovery topics! Don’t miss it!
So, what do you think? Are you going to attend the 2026 UF Law E-Discovery Conference? Please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.
Disclaimer: The views represented herein are exclusively the views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views held by my employer, my partners or my clients. eDiscovery Today is made available solely for educational purposes to provide general information about general eDiscovery principles and not to provide specific legal advice applicable to any particular circumstance. eDiscovery Today should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a lawyer you have retained and who has agreed to represent you.
Discover more from eDiscovery Today by Doug Austin
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.



