Law.com today published a virtual roundtable, Taking Stock of ‘Grokster’, from a special issue of the newsletter Internet Law & Strategy devoted to the Grokster decision. I was honored to be among the lawyers invited to participate. Subscribers to the newsletter can download a PDF version of the complete issue here.…
Back from a blogging break
Back from a week in the Maine woods, where even simple dial-up Internet access was a challenge.…
ABA releases annual legal technology survey
The American Bar Association’s Legal Technology Resource Center has released its 2004-2005 Technology Survey on the use of technology within the legal community. The full survey is available only through purchase — the five-volume set is $2,225. You can download the executive summary in PDF format for a mere $150.…
Court-reporting firm gets $20M in VC
If you needed any evidence that the once simple business of court reporting has grown to mega-scale, the Boston Business Journal reports today that the Boston-based court-reporting and litigation-support firm LegaLink has secured $20 million in venture funding to finance future acquisitions and growth. Would take a lot of depositions to pay that…
An Internet institution quietly closes
In this time of blogs and instant messaging, we tend to forget the once-critical role played by e-mail discussion lists (often referred to by the trademarked name Listserv) in allowing legal professionals to discuss and share ideas. In the mid-1990s, for instance, the net-lawyers list was a virtual town square for lawyers on the Internet,…
Blogging’s burdens may not pay off
I find myself quoted in a Chicago Tribune article on the downsides of blogging. Of interest, the story focuses on marketing consultant Kirsten Osolind’s decision to discontinue her blog. (Many legal bloggers met Kirsten at BlawgConnect in Chicago last March — and I have the photos to prove it.) Kirsten, who runs
Supreme Court nominees who were not confirmed
Of 154 nominations to the Supreme Court between 1789 and 2004, 34 did not win Senate confirmation, according to a March 21 report, Supreme Court Nominations Not Confirmed, 1789-2004, written by Congressional Research Service analyst Henry B. Hogue. The 34 nominations represent 29 individuals — some nominated more than once. Of those 29, five…
LexisNexis to add searching of TV news
LexisNexis will provide searching and viewing of TV news programs by summer’s end, it announced. It has teamed with Critical Mention, a Web-based TV search and broadcast monitoring service, to provide the feature.
According to the announcement, it will deliver searchable video and print news clips together through its pay-as-you-go research service,…
The Donald blogs
Is blogosphere real estate a sound investment? Just ask Donald Trump.
“If Donald Trump is blogging, then blogging is about as mainstream as it gets,” Michael Gartenberg, Jupitermedia VP, tells TechWeb.…
Copyright Office mulls IE-only Web filing
As reported yesterday by ZDNet, the U.S. Copyright Office is seeking comments on a new Web filing system that would require use of Internet Explorer versions 5.1 and higher. Users of alternative browsers, such as Netscape, Firefox and Mozilla, would experience problems using the system.
The system relates to preregistration of eligible copyright…
Button it, judge tells cussing lawyers
“You might think a judge would appreciate some plain talk as a break from legal jargon and esoteric arguments. But court filings have gotten so foul in one Utah dispute that a federal judge is calling a timeout.”…
On pro bono, don’t shoot the messenger
I have enormous respect for the opinions of Carolyn Elefant, but I am at a loss to understand her taking aim at the American Bar Association (Can We Lawyers Please Stop Patting Ourselves on The Back?) for its first-ever national survey of lawyers’ pro bono activity. (See my earlier post about the survey.)…