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Archive for March, 2010

Wonderful Display of Visual Advocacy by Master Short

A few weeks back I noted a yet-to-be-published case by Ontario Master Donald Short on proportionality called Moosa v. Hill Property Management. It’s now been published here, along with this bit of visual advocacy:

I’ve heard Eugene Meehan talk about charts in his written advocacy presentation, but haven’t been exposed to much else on visual advocacy. I like this example because it communicates so much meaning so quickly and, moreover, because it’s accessible to those who are not artistically inclined. Does this offend your typesetter’s eye Simon? Other examples anyone? Links? . . . [more]

Posted in: Legal Information, Substantive Law: Judicial Decisions

Recruitment 2.0

It’s March. Soon the doors of universities and colleges will be flung open, and a stream of students will emerge. Somewhat pasty, a little dazed from the efforts of final exams and papers, they have only one thing on their minds – JOBS. The University of Toronto’s i-School has already had its job fair. Governments are starting the hunt for summer students, and new grads are looking for that first job. It’s a heady time for students and employers alike. I thought it would be appropriate to offer some reflections and tips for job hunters and employers.

Are you in . . . [more]

Posted in: Legal Information

The Torys LLP iPhone App

Remember Steve MatthewsWeb Law Predictions for 2010?

Mobile Web Becomes Important: The mobile web made some major inroads in 2009, but I expect it to become a priority in 2010. By year’s end, expect to be sick of iPhone application launches from the legal industry – both from vendors and law firms. Also expect an increase in law firms launching mobile versions of their website, mobile friendly extranets, and hopefully in all this – something innovative and useful!

Earlier today Torys LLP launched a free app for iPhones and iPads:

  • get our latest news
  • read our
. . . [more]
Posted in: Education & Training, Practice of Law, Practice of Law: Marketing, Substantive Law, Technology

Is Use of Computers for Ticket-Buying Criminal?

Internet Law News today reports on the arrest of four people in the US for fraud and unauthorized access to computers — at least I think that’s what’s going on. Here’s the story:

Four Men Charged In Computerized Online Ticket Scam
Four men accused of using a network of computers and automated software to buy up online tickets to concerts and sporting events and selling them at a profit were indicted on fraud, conspiracy, and computer hacking charges, federal prosecutors said on Monday. They allegedly made more than $25 million by re-selling more than 1.5 million of the “most coveted

. . . [more]
Posted in: Administration of Slaw, Substantive Law, ulc_ecomm_list

Healthy Food Financing Initiative and the Food Environment Atlas

The Obama Administration recently announced the details of its $400 million multi-year Healthy Food Financing Initiative, which will expand access to nutritious foods for underserved urban and rural communities in the US (see the press release from the US Department of the Treasury). To identify communities which currently lack healthy food options, the US Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service launched a great online research tool called the Food Environment Atlas. This tool allows you to compile county-level statistics on three categories of food environment factors:

1. Food choices (e.g., lbs per capita prepared meals, lbs per capita solid . . . [more]

Posted in: Legal Information, Legal Information: Libraries & Research

Law Librarian Podcast Changes – New Name, New Platform

Changes are afoot with the Law Librarians podcast! We have moved to hosting and support by CALI (Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction). We have also taken advantage of this change to rename the show Law Librarian Conversations.

More information is on the website at http://lawlibcon.classcaster.net/. This show was created and is produced by Richard Leiter, is co-hosted by Marcia Dority Baker, and given web support by Roger Skalbeck. It includes a varying group of panelists (of which I am one) and a number of special guests.

We are now recording live twice a month (the first and third . . . [more]

Posted in: Education & Training: CLE/PD, Legal Information, Legal Information: Libraries & Research, Technology

Drawing the Curtain on ISP Cooperation With Law Enforcement

I’ve been a faithful follower of Cryptome for quite some time. Cryptome has been posting very interesting and controversial content on the internet since 1996. It was the first WikiLeaks. Recent readers would note some publications that are very interesting for those who are interested a look at the level of cooperation of between internet service providers and law enforcement. Some of the reaction has been overblown, in my view. Nobody should be surprised that service providers hand over customer information in response to warrants and subpoenaes. Where the law requires it, banks do it, pharmacies do it, libraries . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Lawyers Beware: Don’t Get Phished on Twitter

The ABA Legal Technology Resource Center blog posted a warning this morning that all of us should pay heed to: Be Careful! Twitter Phishing Catches Lawyers, Too

What is “phishing”? Email messages (or even tweets) that trick innocent users into entering their account information (for any account: a Twitter account, an email account, a bank account etc.) into a fake log in page, effectively handing control of their account to a malicious third party.

In the case of these recent Twitter phishing attempts, the usurper then uses the innocent individual’s Twitter account to send out spam, malware, and more phishing . . . [more]

Posted in: Technology

Conference: Reflections on Law, Technology and Society

The University of Ottawa’s Centre for Law, Technology and Society is hosting a conference on Friday, March 5 entitled Taking Stock of Tech: Reflections on Law, Technology and Society. The keynote address will be given by Harvard law prof, Yochai Benkler, who is also the Faculty co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

The conference program and registration information are available online via the link above. . . . [more]

Posted in: Uncategorized

VoxPopuLII on the Neutral Citation, CanLII, and RefLex

Slaw contributor Ivan Mokanov, Deputy Director of LexUM, has an interesting and informative post this morning on VoxPopuLII entitled Environmentally-Friendly Citations. He discusses Canada’s neutral citation, its history and structure, and the extent to which it has been embraced by practitioners, the judiciary, and other tribunals. He also discusses CanLII and the mechanics of RefLex, CanLII’s citator. Cheers to Rob Richards, editor in chief of VoxPopuLII, for the heads up. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Online Voting in Alberta or Elsewhere

According to a report by Richard Liebrecht of the QMI Agency:

Alberta Musing Online Election Voting
New election rules have cleared the way for Internet and electronic voting, which could come to Alberta as early as 2013. “Obviously that online voting is something that’s on the forefront of people’s minds … people say, ‘I can do my banking online, but I can’t do my voting online’,” said Brian Fjeldheim, Alberta’s Chief Electoral Officer.

The Chief Electoral Officer went on to say “Once it has been proven to be effective, that the votes can be certified, all that security stuff can . . . [more]

Posted in: Administration of Slaw, Substantive Law, Technology, ulc_ecomm_list