About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 34. Chapters: Law blogs, Online law databases, Groklaw, UK Statute Law Database, AutoAdmit, Westlaw, Victoria Pynchon, Legal Information Institute, Free Access to Law Movement, Legal OnRamp, LexisNexis, Robin Sax, Ann Althouse, Rollonfriday, PACER, William A. Jacobson, Caselex, Women in Crime Ink, Courtroom View Network, Dennis Crouch, The Volokh Conspiracy, Bitter Lawyer, China Law Blog, IPKat, Writ, Lexwiser, Lawtel, SCOTUSblog, Overlawyered, AdvocateKhoj, LawMoose, JustCite, Oyez Project, HeinOnline, AltLaw, Law and the Multiverse, Manupatra, ArizonaNativeNet, Whocanisue.com, Delaware Corporate and Commercial Litigation Blog, UKSCblog, FindLaw, Above the Law, Equal Justice for Troops blog, THOMAS, LawCareers.Net, The Lawyer Market, Balkinization, Know Your Law, Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy, IndexMaster, OUT-LAW, Scots Law Times, Legifrance, LexUM, Casemaker, Deposition Source, Ethiopian Legal Information Website, Law Underground. Excerpt: Groklaw is an award-winning website covering legal news of interest to the free and open source software community. Started as a law blog on May 16, 2003 by paralegal Pamela Jones ("PJ") at Radio UserLand, it has covered issues such as: the SCO-Linux lawsuits; the EU anti-trust case against Microsoft; and the standardization of Office Open XML. Jones describes Groklaw as ..."a place where lawyers and geeks could explain things to each other and work together, so they'd understand each other's work better. When you have an idea you hope might work, and then to implement it, tweak it, and morph it, because other people show up and have ideas that are better than yours...and then have people you care about and admire tell you that what you are doing matters -- I can't think of a more satisfying feeling." Groklaw's name derives from Robert A. Heinlein's neologism "grok," roughly me...