Be sure to take a look at the Stanford Copyright & Fair Use site which just added these feeds courtesy of Justia:
Featured Cases - Current district court cases that Justia is featuring. That means that Justia has made the court documents available free to the public. Further, if you see a case that particularly interests you (like Aguiar v. Webb which the Stanford Law School's Center for Internet and Society's Fair Use Project is litigating with co-counsel Foley Hoag LLP), you can subscribe. If you subscribe, you'll be new documents soon after they are filed with the court. The latest Harry Potter copyright case is there too.
Dockets - More current district court cases that have been categorized by PACER under Copyright. If you have (or get) a PACER account, you can pay to access the documents at 8 cents per page.
Legislation - A nifty combined feed. It takes the pending legislation list at the U.S. Copyright site, and opens up the bill in GovTrack if available there (don't we all love GovTrack - it gives so more current info on a bill than anything I've seen). If not at GovTrack, the link goes straight to Thomas, the official Congressional site.
Regulations - Uses Justia's Regulation tracker to pick up all feeds (Notices, Proposed Rules, Rules etc.) issued by the Copyright Office and the Copyright Royalty Board.
Copyright Office - Combined feed of the Copyright Office's NewsNet and notices of Copyright Office updates.
Articles - Combined feed of the invaluable SSRN articles (most are free, full text - those with keyword "copyright" from past month are included here) and the great alert service to copyright articles in law reviews compiled by the Tarlton Law Library Current Copyright Literature (first page of article only).
News - A simple "copyright" keyword search using Google News.
Blogs - Aggregation of hand-selected blog feeds discussing copyright by law professors and others who have special expertise/interest in copyright.
Plus there are some podcasts and videos. The current featured video is Larry Lessig's TED Talk on how dismal our copyright laws are for today's remixed world.
Kudos to Tim, Cicely, Jon, Nick, Dan, Vasu, Ken, Courtney and others at Justia
Oops, I meant the site was receiving newly mixed feeds. I'll make the suggestion that it offer direct feeds as you describe to folks for each category.
Posted by: Mary | November 08, 2007 at 11:40 PM
I'm sorry, I'm not getting something. You describe these things as if they are feeds, but I can't figure out how to subscribe to any of them. For instance, the "Blogs" section: I click on the "Blogs" tab and get about 5 of the most current postings; I click on "More Blogs" and am taken to a page that shows many more postings. In neither case does Firefox present the RSS icon I normally use to subscribe to feeds, nor do I see any indication on the site of how to do this. What gives?
Posted by: Michael M. | November 08, 2007 at 05:40 PM