One of those reasons is that we find ourselves being looked to as a regional
repository of case law, if you will, whether we like it or not.
I wrote in August about Malamud's charge to crash the Wexis gate with his plan to create a public - domain
repository of all case law, federal and state, and I first wrote about him a decade ago in recognition of his work to bring the SEC's EDGAR database to the public.
Not exact matches
In addition to the latest online databases, we employ our own centralized legal database, a vast
repository of information that gives us instant access to forms, articles,
case law, legislation, and relevant previous work.
But in America, it's available in two ways; one is
law firms, we have offices in San Francisco and New York,
law firms are invoking it on a SaaS basis
case - by -
case where irrespective
of who they've been using for court reporting for the depositions they basically use this as the centralized collaborative
repository.