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March 29, 2013 | Legaltech News

Study: One in 10 Federal Judges Took Trips on Other People's Dime

The Center for Public Integrity dug through disclosure forms judges filed during the past 4 1/2 years and found that 185 federal district and appeals court judges — 11 percent of federal judges — reported attending at least one seminar at which foundations or corporations paid for air fare, hotel stays and meals.
5 minute read
October 23, 2009 | Legaltech News

FCC Votes to Craft 'Net Neutrality' Rules

Despite the concerns of the telecommunications industry and the agency's two Republicans, the Federal Communications Commission voted to begin writing "network neutrality" regulations to prevent phone and cable companies from abusing their control over the market for broadband access.
4 minute read
June 01, 2013 | Legaltech News

Prime Stakes

Hitting 50? You've only just begun to fully exploit your legal technology education and career opportunities.
7 minute read
October 21, 2011 | Legaltech News

Courts Still Look Toward Traditional, Low-Tech Factors

Attorney Leonard Deutchman looks at how the Pennsylvania Superior Court addressed the technical differences between text messages and emails in Commonwealth v. Koch.
11 minute read
February 09, 2012 | Legaltech News

The Trouble With Keeping Legacy Data Around

Legacy data when kept indefinitely has no value or purpose. But Anne Kershaw, of the eDiscovery Institute, notes it can create expensive havoc and costs that can be avoided if properly managed.
5 minute read
August 19, 2013 | Legaltech News

ILTA News Before the Bell

Product news from the International Legal Technology Association's annual meeting was circulating before the exhibit hall opened.
3 minute read
February 01, 2013 | Legaltech News

Let's Take This Offline

IT teams need to change their approach and attitudes when lawyers ask for their unexpected technology options.
7 minute read
February 14, 2005 | Legaltech News

'Click Fraud' Threatens Online Advertising Boom

Increasingly, merchants are falling victim to "click fraud," a scam that threatens to squelch the online advertising boom that has helped enrich Google, Yahoo and their business partners. The ruse varies, but the result is that merchants are billed for fruitless traffic generated by someone repeatedly clicking on an advertiser's link with no intention of buying anything. In November, a lawsuit filed by Google revealed it can't even trust some of its own advertising partners.
6 minute read
July 05, 2011 | Legaltech News

What's Killing BlackBerry?

As many have opined, BlackBerry seems to be dying -- no matter what its parent company, Research in Motion, attempts to do to turn things around, nothing works. The BlackBerry Storm smartphone, a spectacular failure. The PlayBook tablet, played out. Beyond the numbers, the dwindling market share, the bad press, what caused the company to falter? There have been some interesting takes in recent weeks and months. The decline in BlackBerry's fortunes is reflected in ... [MORE]
5 minute read
April 01, 2003 | Legaltech News

KM: You Really Can Build Your Own!

You don't need buckets of money and engineers.
6 minute read