Using Federal Rules of Evidence to Authenticate Website Content | The Legal
Intelligencer
Website content must be authentic to be admissible. Under Federal Rule of
Evidence 901(a), authentication "is satisfied by evidence sufficient to
support a finding that the matter in question is what its proponent
claims." For example, a proponent offering evidence obtained from the
opposing party's website must also offer evidence that the website is
controlled by the opposing party. Once the proponent produces sufficient
evidence to convince a reasonable juror that the proffered evidence is
authentic, the burden of production shifts to the objecting party to prove
that the evidence is fraudulent.
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