In other regulated industries the reason wouldn't matter; the fact that an unapproved method of transmitting data was used and the data was adulterated in transit would be enough to ream the sender over the coals.
It continues to amaze me the sorts of things the legal profession allows itself to do that it forbids all other industries (including those with far more expertise in the underlying technologies than the legal profession) to do.
In other regulated industries the reason wouldn't matter; the fact that an unapproved method of transmitting data was used and the data was adulterated in transit would be enough to ream the sender over the coals.
It continues to amaze me the sorts of things the legal profession allows itself to do that it forbids all other industries (including those with far more expertise in the underlying technologies than the legal profession) to do.
They certainly charge enough for it to be treated as one.