At the end of Part 13, I said the story was about to move from paper to pixels.
That is where everything changed.
For most of the litigation, I was operating inside the paper version of the case.
Mailed filings.
Scanned copies.
Court-stamped pages.
Low-quality images.
Paper exhibits.
Documents that looked official because they had been filed in court.
That was the world I could see at the time.
But years later, when I was finally able to obtain and inspect more of the actual electronic court files, I began looking at the record differently.
Not just at what the documents said.
At what the files were.
That is when I started looking at metadata.
Metadata is not complicated.
It is the information stored inside or attached to an electronic file.
A PDF may show one thing on the page, but the file can also contain information about when it was created, when it was modified, what software generated it, who authored it, what source document it came from, and sometimes the system or organization connected to the file.
In other words, metadata can be a digital fingerprint.