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With so much regulation on industry sharing and protecting privacy information, the need for redaction is widespread. Here are just a few examples of how redaction is used today. Legal and Courts Law firms redact motions, affidavits, briefs and more before sharing with courts or third parties.
Redact-It Legal Product Sheet (PDF) How Redact-It Gets Used in the Legal Industry (PDF)Court Clerk — Freedom of information regulations require that county recorders make a variety of documents publicly available on the web. Many of these documents contain private information such as social security numbers that require redaction. Such examples include:
Government Many government agencies and departments need to release "sanitized" versions of documents to consultants, vendors or the public. Any classified information needs to be fully redacted prior to release. Corporations Corporations use redaction to protect customer privacy information, financial data and more. With Redact-it, redactions can be based on user permissions/roles, so each user sees only data appropriate for their job function. Corporations also use redaction as part of the e-discovery process and on final litigation documents before making them available to shareholders or the public. Financial Services Financial services companies need to share document bundles, such as mortgage and other loan documents, with outside vendors or partners. Redaction allows private information not relevant to a particular partner to be removed from the documents quickly and easily so they only see the information they need. Healthcare Redaction is used to block private patient information before sharing medical records with insurance, pharmaceutical or other medical services companies. |
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