| |
ReformAltLaw 2 - 12 Nov 2008 - Main.ElliottAsh
|
|
META TOPICPARENT | name="WebPreferences" |
Reforming AltLaw | |
< < | As explained in my first essay for Law in the Internet Society, a public legal-research platform would be a healthy societal development. Columbia's hosted service AltLaw? is a candidate for being that platform. With only a handful of people working on the project, they have already indexed a sizeable collection of cases and statutes. It is faster and cleaner than Lexis/Westlaw. Following the framework established in my essay, I make the following proposals: | > > | As explained in my first essay, a public legal-research platform would be a healthy societal development. Columbia's hosted AltLaw search engine is a candidate for being that platform. With only a handful of people working on the project, AltLaw has already indexed a useful collection of cases and statutes. It is faster and cleaner than Lexis/Westlaw, and it is free without ads (other than professorial self-promotion). Following the framework established in my essay, I make the following proposals: | |
- Allow public submission of legal documents, with some noninvasive administrative mechanism to filter the submission of garbage
- Allow public editing of case metadata--hyperlinking, Shepardizing, etc. (again, with some mechanism for filtering out unhealthy edits)
- Allow integration of custom excerpting filters--for instance, a "Chirelstein Filter" for each case taught in his contracts class, excising the sections that Chirelstein is not interested in.
|
|
ReformAltLaw 1 - 11 Nov 2008 - Main.ElliottAsh
|
|
> > |
META TOPICPARENT | name="WebPreferences" |
Reforming AltLaw
As explained in my first essay for Law in the Internet Society, a public legal-research platform would be a healthy societal development. Columbia's hosted service AltLaw? is a candidate for being that platform. With only a handful of people working on the project, they have already indexed a sizeable collection of cases and statutes. It is faster and cleaner than Lexis/Westlaw. Following the framework established in my essay, I make the following proposals:
- Allow public submission of legal documents, with some noninvasive administrative mechanism to filter the submission of garbage
- Allow public editing of case metadata--hyperlinking, Shepardizing, etc. (again, with some mechanism for filtering out unhealthy edits)
- Allow integration of custom excerpting filters--for instance, a "Chirelstein Filter" for each case taught in his contracts class, excising the sections that Chirelstein is not interested in.
- Integrate custom "Course packages" with links to the case excerpts for a particular course of study
- Decentralize database for p2p document sharing
- Decouple interface from content to allow custom skin design.
- Implement rationalized citation system
|
|
|
|
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform. All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors. All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
|
|
| |