To fill this need, we are excited to offer our first ever Year in Review, offering
insights about judges, districts, parties, law firms, patents, and more.
Meanwhile, Lex Machina, which is owned by Lexis Nexis, mines litigation data, revealing
insights about judges, lawyers, parties, and the subjects of the cases themselves, culled from millions of pages of litigation information.
In an acquisition that brings together cutting edge analytics with a trove of content, LexisNexis has acquired litigation data mining company Lex Machina, which through its Legal Analytics platform provides
insights about judges, lawyers, parties and patents from IP litigation.
Lex Machina uses sophisticated analytics to mine data from intellectual property cases to reveal
insights about judges, lawyers, parties and patents.
Two years ago, I wrote a post titled, In Litigation and Legal Research, Judge Analytics is the New Black, in which I discussed three products — Lex Machina, Ravel Law and ALM Judicial Perspectives — that were extracting data from court dockets and applying analytics to reveal
insights about judges, such as how they might rule on a specific type of motion or how long they might take to issue a decision.
As I reported here when it launched last September, Gavelytics uses artificial intelligence to extract data from court dockets and applies analytics to reveal
insights about judges, such as how they might rule on particular matters and in what timeframe.
Not exact matches
With no
insight into how climate projections are
judged, the public could take away from situations such as the IPCC's uncertain conclusion
about Antarctica in 2007 that the problems of climate change are inconsequential or that scientists do not know enough to justify the effort (and possible expense) of a public - policy response, he said.
The presiding
judge, the Honorable Ann Aiken, was prepared on all arguments from both sides and provided
insights about some of their flaws.
I was thrilled this week to interview two giants of the courtroom, F. Lee Bailey and his former law partner, Massachusetts Superior Court
Judge Kenneth J. Fishman,
about their new book, Excellence in Cross Examination, published by Thomson Reuters, in which the two share their
insights and lessons on how to excel in cross-examination.
By processing this enriched data, lawyers can draw conclusions
about opposing counsel,
judges, litigation parties, and contract drafts in order to reveal
insights that were not previously knowable.
They can not interpret the law or give you any
insight about how a
judge might rule on your request.
«Daily posting of interesting developments
about new and pending Section 337 ITC investigations, litigation trends, statistics, practical
insights into the Administrative Law
Judges, and commentary on important ITC decisions.»
Pittsburgh family law attorney David S. Pollock, a founding partner of Pollock Begg Komar Glasser & Vertz LLC, was sourced for his
insight about the candidates competing in the Democratic primary in District 05-2-35 (the 7th and 14th wards) for magisterial district
judge in a recent article in The Jewish Chronicle.
As
Judge Posner and Professors Epstein and Landes suggested in The Behavior of Federal
Judges, computerized sentiment analysis of the content of judicial opinions could produce more nuanced insights about particular judges» attitudes and ide
Judges, computerized sentiment analysis of the content of judicial opinions could produce more nuanced
insights about particular
judges» attitudes and ide
judges» attitudes and ideology.
Judge Duryee offers helpful
insights about how to successfully settle your personal injury case in mediation.
About Site - Above the Law is a legal web site providing news,
insights, and opinions on Law firms, Lawyers, Law school, Law suits,
Judges and Courts.
Academics,
judges and lawyers, some quite famous, others just gifted, contribute pithy essays on a wide range of topics
about the operation of the law:
insights on legal history, legal thought, important precedents and bobbleheads all fall within its purview.
Every person who by his fault causes harm to another is liable» I'm glad scholars are thinking
about the law and linking it together, and I appreciate the
insights, but the only ones which help when the court opens are the ones which will persuade a
judge with a job to do, and no amount of precedent will do that on its own.
New York, NY
About Blog Above the Law is a legal web site providing news,
insights, and opinions on Law firms, Lawyers, Law school, Law suits,
Judges and Courts.