Sentences with phrase «while legal blogs»

Traditional law reviews now publish online while legal blogs are creating new forms of legal commentary and analysis.

Not exact matches

I'd like to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to the many people who offered assistance and support while the Smith litigation was pending against me, with special thanks to attorney Kenneth White of the Popehat blog and to the Online Media Legal Network at Harvard University's Berkman Center for Internet & Society.
Xi's crime, according to one legal blog: «Emailing while Chinese - American.»
According to legal complaints, some libraries are denying users access to websites that discuss Wicca and Native American spirituality; blacklisting websites that affirm the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities while whitelisting sites that advocate against gay rights and promote «ex-gay» ministries; and refusing to unblock webpages that deal with youth tobacco use, art galleries, blogs, and firearms.
She has dabbled in blog writing, photography, opening a Legal Nomad's shop, and finishing a book (The Food Traveler's Handbook)-- all the while taking detailed notes to share with her blog followers.
The spectre of devices that malfunction with lethal consequences is also reflected in Toyota's many legal problems, reports the WSJ Law Blog, while Howard Knopf's Excess Copyright looks at the emerging issue of event data recorders in Toyotas» black boxes.
This blog provides commentary on Virginia laws and recent legal news while also informing readers of various aspects of law such as causes of motor vehicle injuries and defenses in negligence actions.
'' @ THE WATERCOOLER from Legal Blog Watch Now you can hang up and drive My second - favorite thing about airports is lane - wrestling with every other driver who's lapping terminals, looking for the person they're picking up while yawping into cell phones.
But what bothers me is that these blogs are reprinting entire articles, often from legal periodicals or Web sites, while making the posts appear to be original to the blog.
While we're always glad to see new additions to the Canadian legal blogosphere, we generally wait until a blog has had regular posts for three months before getting it listed.
And while we're taking care of a little housekeeping, I should mention that Legal Blog Watch is getting a face lift.
But while the official law school Web site shows no evidence of the controversy surrounding Mukasey's visit, the law student blog Eagleionline yesterday published a draft of an upcoming article by BC Law Prof. Daniel Kanstroom, «On «Waterboarding»: Legal Interpretation and the Continuing Struggle for Human Rights.»
And while thinking about all of this a colleague * was kind enough to send around a link to a recent post by Brian Sheppard over on the Legal Rebels blog called, «Does machine - learning - powered software make good research decisions?
The blog bills itself as «stakeholder communication meets social networking» and is seeking to walk a fine line, catching the essence of a hipster web 2.0 application while still managing the professional conservative face expected of a Government legal entity.
He found, for instance, that Spamhaus (a UK - based DNSBL) blocked nearly 80 % of spam while blocking very little legitimate email (while legal marketers need not immerse themselves in such technical details, you may want to direct your firm's email administrators to Al's blog as a resource).
In comments on the story over at WSJ Law Blog, a few participants call for the American Bar Association to take a more protectionist approach and prohibit firms from off - shoring work, while others decry use of Indian lawyers as «unauthorized practice of law» since decisions about whether documents are privileged requires legal judgment.
While a bad economy certainly increases stress on the homefront, don't rush to open a divorce law practice, as per the Legal Blog Watch post indicating that divorce business is down because (according to NYC matrimonial lawyer Bonnie Rabin), prospective clients are apparently waiting for homes and retirement accounts to regain value before moving ahead with a breakup.
While clearly, most legal bloggers feel most comfortable with the written word, there are two Canadian legal blogs that have taken up the mic and are steadily producing podcasts too:
At least one legal blogger was in the audience last night when Attorney General Michael Mukasey collapsed while delivering a speech at the annual dinner of the Federal Society in Washington, D.C. Laurie Lin, a contributor to the blog Above the Law and author of her own blog, The Kitchen Cabinet, provided an eyewitness account of the incident to ATL editor David Lat, who posted it last night at 10:30 p.m. Mukasey «literally collapsed mid-sentence at the podium,» she reported.
However, in many (though not all cases) blogs tend to consist primarily of chronologically ordered commentary on recent legal developments in a niche practice area, while traditional microsites tend to also feature extensive libraries of resources such as (in the case of Law and Ethics Online) links to lobbying laws, rules and regulations in all 50 States.
While I was off spring - breaking with my family last week, Law.com editor Jennifer Moline filled in for me here at Legal Blog Watch.
«While traditional media sources often break news, law blogs dive deeper to offer insight into what the news means for clients, the legal profession and the public.
Facebook Pages as a strategic marketing maneuver can increase traffic towards your practice's website or blog, while also creating and maintaining a community that is not only aware of your legal profession, but engaged too.
For a while, it seemed like every legal marketing consultant was promoting blogs as the be-all and end - all of law firm marketing.
I was very pleased, while checking out the LIIofIndia (announced here at Slaw), to see that a link to to the Spicy IP blog by navigating to Intellectual Property through the Subject pages at the Legal Information Institute of India.
The blog will provide advice on «preventing, managing and ending a crisis while protecting a company's reputation and limiting its legal liability.»
While there has been article after article about keeping fresh content on your law firm's website or legal blog to help with your search visibility, there has been very little discussing pay - per - click (PPC) accounts and how to keep them fresh.
And while you'll find plenty of great links wrapped inside, one of the best presents is the bluest blog post I've ever seen — a URL - rich post from CyberTelecom Blog discussing whether it's legal to link to a Web sblog post I've ever seen — a URL - rich post from CyberTelecom Blog discussing whether it's legal to link to a Web sBlog discussing whether it's legal to link to a Web site.
Elsewhere, Legal Profession Blog reports that a lawyer in Michigan has been sanctioned for repeatedly describing his opposing counsel using «a variety of demeaning terms,» while a lawyer in Washington, D.C., has been disbarred for misappropriating clients» funds.
The answer to the first question, while nuanced and important, is one I would hope readers of a mature legal blog such as this one, would already know and respect.
While the law blog may build on — or, perhaps, remediate — aspects of the law review article, legal blogging also emerges out of a tradition of conversation.
The 2009 calendar is out now, and while the photos of both male and female lawyers are far from scandalous — all are fully - clothed, shown doing benign things like cooking or lifting weights — a story about it in Thursday's Boston Globe has prompted a steady stream of Internet traffic here and on other legal blogs.
But while the list may be flawed, the Blawg 100 is definitely mostly some of the best legal blogs on the web.
Next time you gnash your teeth over the bad rap lawyers get, consider this blog entry: In «Eternal Rationalizations of the Legal Mind,» The Wired GC rolls his eyes at the machinations of an attorney who hoarded a priceless piece of art for 28 years while he tried to get an award for returning it.
And while this is important and useful, it is not what I consider to be a challenge to traditional legal publishing, which is something Slaw contributor Jordan Furlong suggested nearly four years ago that blogs might ascend to:
Justice Samuel Alito apparently picked up on the theme, complaining about the role of the Internet in legal reporting, suggesting that the media either oversimplifies or sensationalizes decisions (I guess Alito doesn't realize that while he turns up his nose at Internet reporting, his colleagues are increasingly citing blogs in their opinions).
Finally, McDonald's post concludes with links to other legal writing and grammar blogs to help you learn something useful while visiting Blawg Review # 98.
Lauren Gelman did a fantastic job guest blogging Legal Blog Watch last week while I was away for an unplugged vacation.
Yeah, I've been co-hosting this show for a while with Monica, usually we do it separately, so it's fun when we get to do it together, and I write the blog, lawsitesblog.com, I write for «Above the Law», I write for «The ABA Journal» and various other places covering legal technology.
Essentially, Kevin's article explains the «whys» behind the «what» of legal blogging, while offering concrete steps on how to make the most of a blog to bring in clients and media opportunities.
Some legal proceedings are too boring and lengthy to be the topic of a blog post, while others are just too complex to be explained that way.
Or, even giving away simple forms or drafting blog posts that describe how clients can complete simple legal services themselves while explaining that you're available to help with the complicated stuff if they need it.
Most recently, LexBlog launched an integration with the legal research platform Fastcase, enabling a user, while writing a blog post, to search for a case from within WordPress and then add a citation or hyperlink to the case to the blog post.
Here is an interesting piece from the Legal Times about which I wanted to blog for while.
While I wouldn't advocate the legal tossing of dwarfs for sport I believe I have the right to do so in my blog without being sanctioned by the bar for incivility to «midgets.»
While the press release did not specify what Pitcock had allegedly done, the vagueness «unleashed a torrent of rumors on blogs and in the legal media,» the complaint says.
Recently, while following coverage from the 2017 Center for Computer - Assisted Legal Instruction (CALI) conference, I came across this blog post from the LII blog.
While we won't name names here, it's worth mentioning that we've observed that many of our favorite legal blogs sometimes generate more feedback than our posts typically do.
If there's a lesson to be learned for legal bloggers from this month's analysis, it would be this: While we think of a blog as an external communications tool, it has implicit internal communications value as well.
While many legal blogs are designed more as marketing tools for the attorney / author, O'Keefe said Legal Evolution distinguishes itself by offering legitimate research and ideas that can be used for the benefit of legal tech entreprenlegal blogs are designed more as marketing tools for the attorney / author, O'Keefe said Legal Evolution distinguishes itself by offering legitimate research and ideas that can be used for the benefit of legal tech entreprenLegal Evolution distinguishes itself by offering legitimate research and ideas that can be used for the benefit of legal tech entreprenlegal tech entrepreneurs.
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