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Daily Archives: October 19, 2005

New on LLRX.com

  • Reinventing the Empire of Secrecy: An Agenda for the First DNI, by Lee S. Strickland
  • The Authors Guild v. The Google Print Library Project, by
    Jonathan Band
  • Researching U.S. Treaties and Agreements – Revised and Updated, by Marci Hoffman
  • Criminal Justice Ethics Sources on the Internet, by Ken Strutin
  • In the Wake of Katrina – Where to Find Answers about Courts, Lawyers, by Robert Ambrogi
  • FOIA Facts: FOIA Appeals, the Unspoken Problem, by Scott A. Hodes
  • CongressLine by GalleryWatch.com: Its Not Just A Bill, Its An Amendment, by Paul Jenks
  • After Hours: 2005 Holiday Gift Guide: Maximum Wow, by Kathy Biehl
  • Burney’s Gadgets for Legal Pros: Good Sounds and Good Scans, by Brett Burney
  • LLRX Bookstore
  • LLRX Court Rules, Forms and Dockets, the unique, free searchable database, maintained and continually updated by Margaret Berkland
  • Enterprise Blogging Catches On

    Executive Summary from the Guidewire Group Market Cycle Survey, October 2005: Blogging in the Enterprise (8 pages, PDF) Key findings (140 individual survey respondents): “Corporations of all sizes across a wide array of industries are adopting blogging technologies and practices. 89% of respondents are either blogging or are planning to blog.” “Smaller companies have been… Continue Reading

    Supreme Court Nominee Miers’ Responses to Judiciary Questionnaire, Financial Data and Texans United for Life

    From the New York Times (reg. req’d), links to the following documents in PDF: Senate Judiciary Committee’s Questionnaire (57 pages, PDF) 1989 Questionnaire From Texans United for Life (2 pages, PDF) Financial Statement/Net Worth (2 pages, PDF) Financial Disclosure Report – Nomination Filing (6 pages, PDF) From AP: Disclosure forms of Supreme Court nominee Harriet… Continue Reading

    Access to Commercial Email Services Abroad Blocked By Armed Forces

    As reported by Stars and Stripes today, “On Tuesday, the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps blocked all access to commercial e-mail services, such as Yahoo!, Hotmail, America Online and Google, from overseas government computers…The block includes access to e-mail services from computers at base libraries and liberty centers that are connected to an official government… Continue Reading