Law.gov

Month: February, 2010

Live Blogging Coverage of Law.gov Workshop

Stanford Law.gov workshop Live Blogging Coverage (and, in color, here) with Cover It Live The stream: 9:44 james Tuesday, January 12, 2010 9:44 AM event’s about to start. 9:56 gwachob via twitter Tuesday, January 12, 2010 9:56 AM At the law.gov workshop at Stanford, looking forward to seeing old #findlaw people here – anyone else […]

Law.gov Panel @ Stanford Law Now Online

The Law.gov panel (from 1/12/2010) entitled “Law.gov: A Revolution in Legal Affairs” is now available online. (High-Res versions here and here) Speakers at this panel included: Anurag Acharya, Google (Lead engineer behind Google’s case law project on Google Scholar) Carl Malamud, Public.Resource.Org Jonathan Zittrain, Harvard Law School Moderated by Roberta Morris, Stanford Law School

Roberta Morris – Introduction for the Law.gov Panel

Below is the text of Roberta Morris’ introduction for the Law.gov panel at Stanford Law School: Welcome to Stanford Law School and to the first workshop on law.gov.  I’m Roberta Morris, a lecturer at Stanford Law School, with a long standing interest in the rights of the public to the public domain.  The purpose of […]

RECAP the Law and the Movement to Free Government Records

Now Online. Stephen Schultze is Associate Director at the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University (formerly of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard). His research focuses on government transparency, telecoms policy, and open source. The movement for government transparency has often focused on just two of the three branches of […]