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Archive for ‘Miscellaneous’

Facebook Used by Oxford Proctors

I have been charged by the proctors for breaching rules and being ‘disorderly’, on the basis of photographic evidence from Facebook.

Oxford University student Alex Hill must attend a disciplinary hearing the outcome of which may delay her graduation. Proctors apparently got access to photos of her involvement in disorderly celebration of the end of exams despite the high level of privacy she claims she selected on Facebook, which should have protected her data from prying. A number of students are in a similar position. It’s not clear how proctors were able to access the Facebook accounts or whether they . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Law Books as Disaster Relief

We haven’t heard anyone blogposting from the AALL annual meeting in New Orleans.

But today’s Times-Picayune has a story about a unique gift the law librarians left behind.

Books. Book gift cards. School books. Library books. Law books.

Suggests an interesting task for similar professional meetings in the future.

BTW I was trying to link to some great conference materials that I was hoping to find from the Annual Meeting – but far too many of the sessions had no printed materials available, and those that did were largely useless PDFs of PowerPoint bullets. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Dot Com(pilation)

Dorothy Parker left a number of poems un-anthologized at her death, of which L.A. lawyer Stuart Silverstein gathered together 122 in “Not Much Fun: The Lost Poems of Dorothy Parker.”See Amazon’s “search within book” for some excerpts; also see a review in Salon Some time later Penguin Putnam published “Dorothy Parker, Complete Poems” and incorporated all but one of the poems in the “Not Much Fun” book without giving Silverstein any credit or payment. Silverstein sued, claiming compilation copyright. The cases has been to trial (where Silverstein won) to appeal [PDF] (where he lost on some issues), . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Book: Innovation at Risk

Three free chapters are available online of a book to be published by the Princeton University Press, Innovation at Risk: The empirical case that today’s patent system discourages innovators—and how it might be fixed, by James Bessen and Michael J. Meurer. To see if it’s of interest, you might take a look at the Synopsis [PDF] or Chapter 1: Introduction: The Argument in Brief [PDF]. The other free chapters are: 3: If You Can’t Tell the Boundaries, Then It Ain’t Property [PDF] and 9: Abstract Patents and Software [PDF]. You’ll also find a few links to associated material on . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Wordcount

The word “law” is the 321st most frequently used word in the English language, which ain’t bad. I know this via Wordcount, a datamining tool by the inventive Jonathan Harris, creator of the interesting news site 10×10 and other fascinating displays of our collective behaviour.

Mining data from the British National Corpus, Wordcount includes all the words that occur at least twice there, some 86,000 of them. It then portrays them according to frequency, using size as a visual indicator. There may not be much intellectual meat here, but it is fun to roam around and to . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Placeholder on Dell

I’ve no time to do a thorough analysis but the Dell decision was handed down by the Supreme Court this morning.

Court split 6-3.

The case has interesting things to say about

arbitration
contracts of adhesion in consumer matters
click-through contracting on websites
the relationship between the Civil Code and the principles of private international law.

And its the first time that the court has referred to Max Weber‘s typologies of legal rationality in On Law in Economy and Society, for which see Rheinstein, Kronman and now Duncan Kennedy.

Now over to Vincent for the full analysis . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

The Friday Fillip

So many things. New products every day. So much choice. Or…?

Photographer Mark Luthringer has put together — literally — images of parts of everyday objects, such as cars, houses, RV’s, commercial buildings, all under the rubric of Ridgemont Typologies. The effect can be surprising, as we see our variety disappear into the dominant stylistic mode. There’s an artist statement here, if you’re interested. Now, I’ll let the images speak for him, only a couple of which I’ve excerpted below, linked to a larger array on his site.

I was struck the other day, after looking at Luthringer’s photos, . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

PKP 2007 Opening Keynote

Last night’s energetic keynote address from John Willinsky was humorous and engaging, and offered several interesting insights on the history and future of OA. Under the title 10 Years After, he recapped the history of the PKP, which started out as a “project” he expected to last a few months in 1997 and morphed into the much larger body of works and research that it is today. I won’t try to recap the details of that history, but I’ll report some of the current statistics that show the success and variety of the PKP Open Journals System (OJS) software. Currently . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

More Facebook

Tired of Facebook yet? Its only going to get bigger….

The UK Research Information Network blog has two interesting posts about Facebook:

new stats on its staggering growth
reasons why Facebook will grow and outlast myspace

The Globe and Mail also has a recent story on Facebook that focuses on the young founder and controlling shareholder Mark Zuckerberg. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

New Book on Legacy of Former Chief Justice Bora Laskin

Canadian legal publisher Irwin Law has just published The Laskin Legacy: Essays in Commemoration of Chief Justice Bora Laskin:

“This book is a collection of seventeen scholarly articles and personal reminiscences that examine the life and career of the late Bora Laskin, former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. The essays are written by family members, judges, law professors, and lawyers whose recollections about Laskin flesh out the life of a man ‘at the summit of Canada’s political and legal life,’ with commentary from some whose paths crossed his. The book includes examinations of Laskin’s contribution to

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

PKP 2007

I’m attending the Public Knowledge Project‘s PKP Scholarly Publishing Conference 2007, and I’ll be entering brief descriptions of the events and my impressions over the next few days. Here’s the conference’s self-description:

The conference will provide opportunities for those involved in the organization, promotion, and study of scholarly communication to share and discuss innovative work in scholarly publishing, with a focus on the contribution that open source publishing technologies (such as, but not restricted to, PKP’s OJS, OCS, and OA Harvester) can make to improving access to research and scholarship on a global and public scale.

Major keynote

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

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This project has been made possible in part by the Government of Canada | Ce projet a été rendu possible en partie grâce au gouvernement du Canada