When a law firm dies, what becomes of its website? In the case of Bingham McCutchen, its site still looms — the ghost of something that once was. But now, the central image touts Morgan Lewis, the new home of the majority of the former Bingham lawyers and staff,…
The Largest Free Collection of Law Reviews on the Web
I try to cover sites here soon after they launch, but every so often I miss one. In this case, I missed a big one. Launched in August 2013, Law Review Commons is the largest open-access law review portal on the web. It provides access to more than 200…
Podcast: Ebola, Quarantines and the Law
With Ebola quarantines making headlines, what is the law? What powers do local, state and federal governments have to quarantine people who have or are suspected of having the disease? And what are the rights and protections of the quarantined individuals?
We examine these questions and more on this week’s Lawyer2Lawyer legal-affairs podcast.…
Friday Round-Up: Catching Up on the Week’s News
Catching up on some of the week’s news in legal technology and information:
Banking law resource. On Wednesday, Bloomberg BNA announced the launch of Bloomberg Law: Banking, an all-in-one resource on legal and regulatory issues that integrates banking news, analysis, primary and secondary sources and practical tools. The collection includes…
More on Law Genius: ‘Legal Footnotes on Crack’
After my post Monday about Law Genius, a crowdsourcing site for posting and annotating legal documents, someone pointed me to this Betabeat piece from 2012…
Today is This Blog’s 12th Anniversary
Seems kind of crazy that I’ve been doing this blog for 12 years. But here’s the evidence, my first post, on Nov. 19, 2002: Welcome to my blog.
Why do I keep doing it after a dozen years? It’s fun. It keeps me on my toes. It’s helped me make some very good friends and…
AbacusLaw 2015 is An All-New Version of a Practice Management Stalwart
Among many competing practice management systems, AbacusLaw is a stalwart, on the market for over three decades. And while the software has been updated and enhanced over the years, its user interface was dated. Now, AbacusLaw has undergone an overhaul. The new version released yesterday, dubbed AbacusLaw 2015, promises…
New Crowdsourced Law Site is Part of Larger Project to ‘Annotate the World’
There is something very fitting in the fact that a site that started out deciphering rap lyrics is now turning its attention to making sense of the law.
The site, Law Genius, is the newest member of the larger Genius network of crowdsourced community sites, all of which grew out of…
Draft and Format Legal Pleadings and Briefs with DraftLaw
As if drafting a legal pleading or brief wasn’t work enough, then you have to format it. That means getting the caption just right, assembling the table of contents, building the table of authorities, making sure footnotes are in the right format, etc., etc. And how you do all these things will vary…
Book Commemorates 800th Anniversary of Magna Carta
Eight-hundred-year-old documents are not the usual bailiwick of this blog. On Friday, however, I had the great privilege of attending an event at the Supreme Court for the release of the book, Magna Carta:…
‘Delivery Trust’ Lets You Encrypt and Control Your Email
When drafting an email in Outlook, the Delivery Trust toolbar provides security options.
Email encryption is one of those things lawyers talk about far more than they do. As I reported here recently, the 2014 ABA Legal Technology Survey Report found that only a quarter of law firms had any kind…
‘Hackcess’ Winners to Teach MIT Course on Access to Justice
The winner and a finalist in the ABA Journal’s Hackcess to Justice event, held last August during the ABA annual meeting in Boston, are teaming up to teach a course at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on using software and technology to expand access to justice.
William Palin, the Massachusetts lawyer who