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Blogs and Wikis

April 02, 2007

Hooray - I figured out how to use tags instead of categories in this blog

As I suspected, it's much easier and more flexible.  So if any of you are looking for new posts based on categories, you may not find them. Use the technorati tags at the bottom of a post instead. If it works like I think it will, I'll probably stop using categories altogether.

Update: It looks as if users who click on a technorati tag below will get everyone in the world's posts with those tags. That's useful, but it would be nice to have an option to limit it to this blog, the way flickr does.  Well, there's always the search button in the blog...

March 29, 2007

Bay Area Blawgers - conversation

Last night's meet up of Bay Area Blawgers (aka legal bloggers) was really interesting.  Eric Goldman convened the group, and started off with clearly pronouncing that anything said was "on the record."

Some of the more interesting comments, paraphrased, were:

... I'm not as angry as I seem.  Also, I often learn from comments, even those that seem snarky.  Often, when you meet the person face-to-face, they're as nice as can be.  Then their snarky comments on your blog seem to fade away...

... We got three cease and desist letters in one week.  One asked us to remove an article that we hadn't written, and as it turned out, the reporter had made several errors.  The letter told us to take it down and pay a certain sum of money.  It also told us about another blogger who had complied, paid the money, taken the material down...  We did cross out the original article (still showing it as readable), and added corrections. We didn't respond to the c & d, and that's the last we heard from them.

Minow comment ex post facto:  This is a great example of how libel law needs to evolve.  Now that it's so easy to make corrections, and in fact if there's a dispute over what is correct, the aggrieved party can easily mount her own platform to speak her own truth.

And, an action item was given: File notice with the Copyright Office to get a safe harbor if  one of your commenters posts infringing material.   A show of hands was surprising - maybe one or two of us had done this.  I've gently exhorted libraries to do this in the past, but it's something for bloggers to consider as well - especially those with active comments.  I just checked, more expensive that I'd thought - $80.  The form is dead simple though.

Perhaps the most interesting discussion was at the end - do blawgs influence the law?  A patent attorney said he didn't see any influence really. He reads blogs for fun, but when he needs legal authority, he goes to the federal circuit and patent office.  Kim Kralowec, however, said that she (and by extension, her blog readers) has far greater access to unpublished decisions, which affects her practice.  Eric Goldman talked about  emerging areas of law that have lots of unpublished opinions, and with bloggers posting unpublished opinions, minute orders etc., the judges are more accountable since they can't slip under the wire as much.

Finally, an announcement was made that the San Francisco Bar Association is offering a session April 19th at lunch on Blogs, Wikis and Podcasts, Oh My! Unravel New Media’s Ethical Impact on Your Law Practice with 1.5 hours legal ethics MCLE!

Eric asked if we'd all like to reconvene in about six months.  A definite yes!

Update: Eric's recap is here.

March 17, 2007

Meet-up: Bay Area Blawgers on March 28 6-8 pm

This looks like fun - a chance to meet SF Bay Area blawgers in person.   

Blawgs are legal blogs, by the way.

Santa Clara University School of Law's High Tech Law Institute is sponsoring a gathering for Bay Area legal bloggers on March 28 from 6-8 pm.

Not only will this be a great chance to see if there are real people behind many of the blawgs I read, it's also good for an hour of CLE credit!

There will be a guided roundtable discussion led by Kurt Opsahl of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Cathy Kirkman of the Silicon Valley Media Law Blog (and a partner at Wilson Sonsini), and Mike Dillon of The Legal Thing (and General Counsel of Sun Microsystems).  For more info, see
Eric Goldman's Technology and Marketing Blog March 1 entry.

When: March 28, 6-8 pm
Where: Wiegand Room, Arts & Sciences Building, Santa Clara University.
Cost: Free. Parking is available for $5
CLE: This event qualifies for 1 hour of general CLE credit. Santa Clara University School of Law is a State Bar of California approved MCLE provider.
How: Please RSVP to egoldman at gmail.com

January 29, 2007

Can I use tags in Typepad blogs?

Question for readers:  Can I use "tags" in my Typepad blog posts? I've been using "categories" but it seems like it would be more fun and flexible if I could use "tags" like in Flickr.  Is this something I can do easily? Note: I'm no techie.

Thanks.

April 27, 2006

What can and should libraries do about MySpace.com?

Francisco Pinneli, City Librarian at Santa Maria Public Library writes:

Can you direct me to any resources about how libraries are dealing with MySpace?

Anyone?

November 18, 2005

To bloggers: do you have to cough up your anonymous sources when you get a subpoena?

I just spoke with Barbara Fullerton who is in the PhD program at the University of North Texas in Denton, TX.  She is writing an article on the effect the Free Flow of Information Act (federal shield law) proposed by Rep. Mike Pence would have on bloggers.  Feel free to send her your thoughts at cybrarian01@yahoo.com.

If you have a blog, do you consider yourself a journalist or a blogger? That is, if you use an anonymous source (and don't we all?), and you get a subpoena to reveal your source, are you protected as a blogger?  Can you claim protection as a journalist?  Can and should "journalist" be defined?

Good news for bloggers as far as campaign finance law - the Federal Election Commission just unanimously said that the Fired Up! network of blogs qualifies for the press exception to federal finance law. More at Media Law blog by Robert Ambrogi, Nov 17 post.

I mentioned to Barbara that I began my blog with the question of whether public libraries are exposed to lawsuits when they allow public comment as part of the library blog.  I think libraries should think long and hard before they enable comments.  A censored commentator could try to claim that the blog is like the library's bulletin board or giveaway table. If so, the library cannot remove a comment based on its content or viewpoint without triggering a First Amendment problem - quite possible at the near-impossible-to-meet legal standard of strict scrutiny.

Since I didn't have actual readers back in the ancient times when I wrote my first blog entry, (April 2004), Barbara suggested I bring it back up for debate.  (Notable exception - Infozo the Moron Librarian found me back at my very first post - impressive).

One possible workaround - keep official library blogs as one-way communication.  Let the Friends group sponsor a blog that allows library user comments.  Private groups can generally remove comments without triggering First Amendment liability.

Update: I see that Eugene Volokh is working on an article about whether bloggers should be entitled to various protections that mainstream media writers get ... see discussion at The Volokh Conspiracy Nov 17

September 15, 2005

Query: How can I reduce comment spam?

Grrr.... anyone know how to reduce comment spam? At least the current trend is to say they love the blog - before pitching the cialis. 

I like blogs that use CAPTCHACaptcha_1 for comments. It makes users type the letters they see in an image, cutting down the robots. TYPEPAD, my host, doesn't offer it.  Anyone know of a simple third party CAPTCHA solution that I can use with TYPEPAD?

What I don't think I want:

1)to learn how to host the blog myself

2)require user registration - as a blog reader, requiring me to "register" just turns me away, even when I have something pithy to say.

April 30, 2005

Another reason to like blogs - they don't scream in your ear

Michael McGrorty wisely points out that even though blogs have become as ubiquitous as the cell phones attached to our heads, you only have to read them if you want to.

...the weblog is not in the public eye; it is not some electronic busker, banging away on a drum outside one’s window in the small hours.  To read a weblog a person has to desire to; the act entails a series of conscious, positive actions, even more than would be required to read the content of a magazine.  The weblog is a hidden thing that can only be uncovered by design and effort.  Nobody has to read a weblog.  In fact, most of them are hardly read by anybody.  They are certainly not like billboards screaming from the roadside, nor as some have put it, like graffiti in a washroom..."  Library Dust April 28

By the way, I relate to Michael's characterization of blogs that persist as a possible indicator of authors "in the grip of some strange compulsion."  Library Dust is approaching its first anniversary ... and LibraryLaw blog marks its first anniversary at this location today.  [update: to find oldest archives, for Typepad blogs like this one, click the word Archives on the right - you'll find months older than those listed]

April 27, 2005

Have you modified a wiki? Try the unofficial ALA Chicago conference wiki

I've been too intimidated to modify the Wikipedia, though I added a comment there once. 

But I took a shot at the new unofficial wiki for the ALA Annual Conference in Chicago started by Meredith Farkas and eminently editable by anyone. 

I added recommendations for Pizzeria Uno, Midway airport and the architectural boat tour on the Chicago Tips for Newbies page (it's just too easy - you just click "edit") ...   Lo and behold a couple of days later, someone (or ones) added a better description of Midway and links to Unos and the boat tour. 

Meredith - GREAT USE OF WIKI.  Now that my feet are wet, I'll start one myself sometime when I have a project that would suit it.

April 26, 2005

Blogs and the Law

Seeing Kimberly Kralowec's post reminded me I want to point readers (especially those of you who are bloggers) to a new working paper on the law and economics of blogging, by Univ. of IL law professor Larry Ribstein.

I found his defamation discussion most interesting - especially the idea that libel law may change as a result of blogging. It's no longer difficult for private persons who are maligned to access a public forum to "counteract false statements."

In the meantime, since the law has not changed yet, Andrew Sullivan said (elsewhere) that he set up a limited liability corporation for his blog to insulate him from lawsuits.

MR. SHAFER: ...  So I would say that I tend not to predict, because I always predict wrong, but I would venture that what we'll see is, you know, the full First Amendment rights and prosecutions of libel extending to the blogosphere that we—

MR. SULLIVAN: I bought an expensive liability insurance.

MR. SHAFER: Yeah?

MR. SULLIVAN: Yeah, at the very beginning. Which actually took up a certain of the money that we raised. Precisely because. And set up an LLC, you know, so that the blog exists independently of me as a little company, as it were, just so—because I was nervous, given how many people might have it in for me, that I might be liable to that. But we don't know. I mean, it's basically untested. We have no idea what the possible standards of this are legally