Legal practice

The Future of Law: Will Big Law Firms Go the Way of the Powdered Wig?

July 27th 2009

The Times of London has published serialized extracts of Richard Susskind’s forthcoming book, The End of Lawyers? His thesis is that legal practice hasn’t changed as quickly as business, and he suggests that big law firms are where metropolitan newspapers were a generation ago. I know quite a few  “recovering lawyers” or “lawyers in denial.” They […]

How to Tell Your Client “No” and Protect Their Brand Too.

May 14th 2009

There are a lot of situations where allegations of trademark infringement are counter productive. As you’ve read here, overly aggressive enforcement can lead to unexpected, damaging, consequences for brands. Deutsche Telekom: threatened a tech blog for using magenta headlines, the color they reserved for tMobile. Monster Cable: the litigious audio wire vendor has threatend baseball […]

Jim Sokolove 2.0: PR & Web Signal New “Sokolove Law” Brand

March 5th 2009

Sokolove Law: Both Entrance and Exit In January the Law Office of James Sokolove turned the media spotlight on itself. It issued a press release that Mr. Sokolove was making media appearances on a local rock station and PBS. Then there was the long-format feature in Boston Magazine, with the tag line “They’ve also created […]

Rebel Efforts to Liberate the Law

January 13th 2009

Tim Stanley, Carl Malamud, and the the team at Altlaw.org are tenacious, creative and on a mission. Individually, each is finding creative ways to make America’s vast quantity of legal documents available over the Internet at no charge to the public. Together, they are opening up America’s legal system to the public through the Internet. […]

Video Games Emerge as Lucrative Law Niche

December 6th 2008

Are video games the future?  A colleague and I have been discussing what areas of legal practice will thrive in this economic downturn. There’s growing buzz about video-game law as a hot niche practice area. The Xconomy blog suggests casual video games, those without monthly subscriptions and fancy gear, may be recession-proof. Sheppard, Mullin, Richte […]

DHS Learns Not to Build Cases on Wikipedia; They’re Not Admissable.

September 10th 2008

Google may give Wikipedia lots of authority, but don’t count on that to help in the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals.  An immigration case appealed there hinged on the authority of a personal identification document, for which the feds used evidence from Wikipedia to determine that it did not meet its standards. Unfortunately for DHS, using […]

Quick Links: Dumb Ideas In Online Law

August 17th 2008

FCC Commissioner McDowell Proposed Crackpot Threat to Bloggers While addressing the conservative Heritage Foundation, FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell made a lame attempt to suggest this election is about preventing Democrats from using the FCC to regulate content on Internet blogs. Of course, there’s no legal basis for the FCC to regulate content on personal servers, and […]

Judge in Porn Case Calls for Investigation of His Own Online Porn Collection

June 17th 2008

Keep reading: it keeps getting stranger. But there may be something to like here, too. On Thursday, Judge Alex Kozinski, the Chief Judge for the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, called on Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts to convene an ethics panel to investigate his own conduct. Judge Kozinski was presiding over a high-profile obscenity […]

Who Uses a Product Called “Evidence Eliminator” Before Trail? Not Barbie.

June 16th 2008

A giant legal dope slap seems headed from Barbie to the makers of The Bratz. As you may know, Mattel accused the manufacturer of the Bratz line of dolls, MGA, of essentially stealing the idea for the Bratz from Mattel. The Bratz are estimated to generate 2 billion dollars of revenue for MGA annually. The […]

Is CourtroomLive Ready for Prime Time?

February 7th 2008

This week, ALM, publisher of 33 professional magazines including The American Lawyer, and  Courtroom View Network (CVN), a legal-news video service, announced CourtroomLive.com.  The service will allow legal professionals to watch current trials as they happen, and distribute the feeds securely to clients or colleagues. Imagine how firms could create shadow juries to watch actual […]