Starting sometime tomorrow, FindLaw will have a new front page — or, more accurately, two front pages. Rather than a single page with sections for lawyers, consumers, small businesses, students and corporate counsel, as it has now, the new design will have dual front pages, one for consumers and one for legal professionals. A…
Two (or three) good reasons to visit Chicago in November
Two good reasons to visit Chicago in November:
Reason 1: First Annual Peer-to-Peer Litigation Summit, Nov. 3. Reason 2: BlawgThink 2005, Nov. 11 and 12.Unfortunately, my schedule will not allow me to attend either one. But I will be appropriately envious of those who do.
Need a third reason? Well, there’s always…
C2C: Experts examine bankruptcy ‘reform’
Our weekly legal news podcast Coast to Coast this week looks at the new bankruptcy law and its impact on consumers, creditors, lawyers and the courts. Joining J. Craig Williams and me to discuss the law are:…
Lawyer’s former blog at center of political stir in Kentucky
One day after a Kentucky newspaper reported about the former blog of a lawyer named to head a new government office, Kentucky Gov. Ernie Fletcher scrapped plans for the office.
Fletcher had named lawyer C. Dodd Harris IV to direct a new Office of Merit System Referrals, which would look for political bias in merit…
Where to find the Miers questionnaire
The Senate Judiciary Committee today released four documents providing additional background on Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers, including a 57-page Judiciary Committee questionnaire and a 1989 Texans United for Life survey in which Miers reveals her views on abortion. Also released were a financial disclosure form dated Oct. 17, 2005, and a financial statement outlining…
KM and the DuPont Legal Model
The DuPont Legal Model has become the de facto standard for relationships between corporate law departments and outside law firms. So I was intrigued when I received a note today from Jean Graef, founder of the Montague Institute in the beautiful Western Mass. town of Montague, about a Nov. 17 teleconference, Leveraging…
Sunshine Week launches a blog
I attended a conference this weekend where I heard Debra Gersh Hernandez, national coordinator of Sunshine Week, talk about plans for Sunshine Week 2006. Like the first event this year, the week will be devoted to raising public understanding of the importance of open government.
In the course of her talk, Hernandez announced…
NH Supreme Court readies live webcasts
Oral arguments at the New Hampshire Supreme Court will be broadcast live over the Internet starting Wednesday, the court announced today. The broadcasts will be available at the court’s Web site. The broadcasts will be recorded and available to be replayed at any time. The court has provided audio recordings of oral…
C2C: Squaring off on the NJ vioxx trial
This week, our weekly legal news podcast Coast to Coast looks at the Vioxx trial underway in Atlantic City, N.J. Joining my cohost J. Craig Williams and I earlier today to record a discussion of this issue were: …
Yahoo! unveils podcast searching
Yahoo! today introduced Yahoo! Podcasts, a beta tool for helping users find, listen to and record podcasts. It allows users to search for podcasts by keywords, by categories and by tags. It also has tutorials on how to listen to podcasts and how to record them.…
Entry deadlines loom for tech, small biz awards
The folks who bring you the magazines Law Technology News, Small Firm Business and Law Firm Inc. have not one but two contests to recognize innovation and best practices in the legal field, and both have entry deadlines that are fast approaching.…
Ruling sets precedent protecting anonymous bloggers
The Delaware Supreme Court yesterday handed down an important ruling that protects anonymous bloggers from attempts to unnmask them through libel lawsuits. This is the first ruling by a state supreme court on this matter. The court said that, if an elected official claims he has been defamed by an anonymous posting on a blog,…
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