Using Bing Search Engine for Foreign Legal Research
The Bing search engine seems to be indexing specific resources from LexisNexis. For example, a search of [france lexis] produced the following result in position number four: www.lexis.com...
View ArticleFrench Government Report: Creativity and the Internet
The French government has published a report (Creation et Internet) on the future regulation of the Internet. The report discusses intellectual property and proposals to tax search engines, such as...
View ArticleIntroducing and Integrating Free Internet Legal Research into the Classroom
“Introducing and Integrating Free Internet Legal Research into the Classroom” University of Miami Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2010-05 JOOTAEK LEE, University of Miami – School of Law The Global...
View ArticleHow widespread is WestlawNext?
A student asked me this question. Since I live and work in the beautiful bubble known as Stanford University,and have no idea how things work in the Real World, I turned to outside help to answer the...
View ArticleThe Future of Legal Search
Here’s a White Paper from Cognizant 20-20 Insights (September 2011) that should be of interest to many readers of this blog: The Future of Legal Search: Meeting Lawyer Requirements by Delivering More...
View ArticleGoogle Fresh
Announced today on the Official Google Blog: Google is bringing you ‘fresher’ search results. Based on changes in their ranking algorithm, approximately 35 percent of searches will be impacted (or made...
View ArticleIndian Legal Research Sites
A roundup of free Indian legal research resources: Indian Kanoon http://www.indiankanoon.org/ Full-text access to Supreme Court and state court case law. Legal Information Institute of India...
View ArticleThe Case for Curation: The Relevance of Digest and Citator Results in Westlaw...
“The Case for Curation: The Relevance of Digest and Citator Results in Westlaw and Lexis” SUSAN NEVELOW MART, Colorado Law, University of Colorado Boulder School of Law JEFFREY LUFTIG Humans and...
View ArticleMeet Ravel and its approach to legal data visualization
Ravel, a search visualization, analytics, and annotation platform of United States Supreme Court and Circuit Court cases, now offers free and unlimited access directly through the website (in beta...
View ArticleAre we teaching what they will use?
Here at Stanford we haven’t shown our students Shepard’s in print in at least a decade. And we have long since stopped using the digests in print as well. So it was good to see these decisions...
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