E-book advocates highlight content evolution

Story in today’s Financial Times:

E-book advocates highlight conent evolution

By Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson

From the story:

But the technology and pricing of e-readers is changing fast, as devices from Interead, Hearst and Plastic Logic, backed by retailer Barnes & Noble, join Amazon and Sony’s brands.  Forrester Research expects the US e-reader market to grow from 1m units to 12m by 2012 as new devices offer wireless connections, touch screens and, in time, colour displays.

Changing fast, but not fast enough.  Today classes begin for 1Ls here at Stanford, and already one professor is reporting that the bookstore does not have sufficient copies of the casebook available.

There’s also a related front-page story from today’s paper:  “French book publisher warns of Google-Amazon pricing threat.  Deep cuts being forced,” says Hachette chief.  By Ben Hall in Paris.

For more www.ft.com/mediachallenge

PACER Spending Survey

As many of you know, earlier this summer, we launched a petition to  improve PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records).  As a follow-up to a number of the comments we received on the petition, we created a web survey on Zoomerang to learn more about actual library expenses for PACER.

Fifty-eight law firm libraries responded.  And for 2008, these firm libraries spent on average $13,068.48 on PACER.  The total expenses for these firms was $692,629.30 in 2008.  Notable, too, one firm spent almost $110,000 on PACER last year.

Sixty-six law school libraries, including thirty-two public and thirty-four private, responded.  In 2008, the law school libraries spent on average $656.74 on PACER; the total expenses in 2008 for law school libraries was $38,090.92.

And, between the public and private schools, there was a difference, too.  The public law school libraries spent almost half as much as the private law school libraries (public law school libraries in 2008: $457.08 average vs. private law school libraries: $856.40 average).

[Note: we had fewer than 10 responses in the other categories of Federal Ct/Gov't, State Ct/Gov't, Non-law Academic, Corporate, and Other.]

While the vast majority of law firm library respondents shared that they do not place “any restrictions or limitations on PACER usage or access in their library” (language from the survey question),  only three out of the sixty-six (4.5%) academic law library respondents stated that they did not limit or ration access to PACER (however, one of these schools reported spending less than  $ 20.00 in 2008).

Many of the firm librarians commented that the cost of PACER was far less than the commercial options (CourtLink, CourtExpress) or sending a runner to the court to copy documents.  The firm librarians also noted that they could often pass the costs of PACER on to their clients; however, some librarians noted difficulties with the PACER billing reports and client matter numbers.

On the flip side, academic law librarians were very concerned about the costs.  A few of the comments included: “that there is no way to limit costs’, “it gets expensive rather quickly”, “if PACER were cheaper, … we would use PACER more frequently”, and one stated that they have a “PACER account that few know about (so as to minimize costs).”

The unknown/potential costs of using PACER hold back most law school libraries from letting their patrons fully utilize PACER.  However, if we limit access to PACER, can we provide adequate training that prepares our students?  In the survey that we conducted just last year regarding Westlaw and Lexis preferences among law librarians, when respondents were asked which other online databases that they would like to have taught in law school, eighty percent of the law firm librarians wanted training provided on PACER.    We need to train our students and equip our patrons with access to this important resource, but we can’t afford to do so.  In our library alone, we had one student patron run up a $500 dollar bill on PACER.  If we allowed all of our students full access, our spending could easily surpass our Westlaw and Lexis costs.

In just a few weeks, we plan to share the petition results with the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts.  It is not too late to sign and most importantly, add comments and your thoughts to this dialogue.

US Courts & RECAP – the Latest News

Paul Alan Levy on the Consumer Law and Policy blog writes:

“I got a call this afternoon from Michel Ishakian, the Deputy Chief for IT Policy and Budget at the Administrative Office of the United States courts.  She assured me that they have no problem with counsel using RECAP (discussed here) and that the language sent out by the Northern District of Georgia (see my update to my previous post) is the only language that she disseminated for publication.  She also indicated that she has been in touch with Ed Felten (under whose auspices RECAP was developed) and that, so far as she can tell, he and she are on the same page.

To the extent that messages from some districts sounded more severe, it was simply a matter of reminding all of our ECF filers to be careful about computer security and was not intended to discourage use of RECAP.”

I wonder if there will be a new series of e-mails from the courts to this effect….

Shedding West

There’s been quite a flurry of e-mails on the law librarians listserv with the subject line “West thinks you shouldn’t know your librarian’s name.”    It traces back to a marketing campaign by West which wanted to convey the notion that attorneys need West, and only West, and not librarians. “All it takes is West” was the message. It caused quite a stir, commented about on the Law Librarian’s blog here.  

“All it takes is West” was, perhaps, more or less true MANY years ago, in the dark days of using the digests to find cases.  Today, all it takes is a good librarian to save the organization and its clients tons of money.   We are shedding West publications left and right (mainly because of, in my opinion, outrageous annual price increases), and our patrons (all of whom know our first names) are doing just fine, producing outstanding scholarship and achieving significant clinical victories.

Let me provide an example of an outrageous price increase for a title we are shedding:  Today we received Women and the Law, 2009 Edition, edited by Jane Campbell Moriarty.  It’s a paperback volume accompanied by a invoice for $ 569.75.  The volume starts with reproducing the Lilly Ledbetter Act, and also including some of that act’s legislative history.    The rest of the volume seems to consist mainly of reproductions of articles published elsewhere and readily available to us from a variety of sources.   Handy?, sure.  But worth it?  I’d love to know how that price was set.

Obviously the selection of the content took thought and effort.  And there is also a handy table of cases and what appears to be a fairly detailed index (e.g., looking up “assisted reproduction” led me to “Fetal drug laws” which led me to many topics, including “zona pellucida manipulation” which was not an obvious search phrase to me).  So there is most certainly added value to the compilation.  But  for $ 569.75 ?  I showed to a law professor who researches women’s issues and she said she didn’t need it.   

The previous edition cost us $ 495.00, so the price for the newer edition has gone up by about 15% (the same percentage I need to trim from my budget!).  Now that’s something to get up-in-arms about (not so much the bone-headed marketing campaign, which is really just the left hand of a big corporation not knowing what the right hand is doing).

“Sony to link Readers with libraries, allow e-book borrowing”

On Ars Technica:

“At a press event at the New York Public Library, Sony announced that its Reader hardware will soon be able to read digital books “borrowed” from local libraries, with a 21-day expiration date. By the holidays, the Reader lineup will be joined by a 3G-enabled wireless reader with a seven-inch screen.”

Most notable:

“Notes can be exported back to the desktop software with an image of the text they were associated with, so even if the underlying library book expires, the effort isn’t lost; maybe Sony didn’t want to be targeted with a class action lawsuit, such as the one that Amazon was hit with.”

Could this be a good platform for digital course reserves?

Is searching the best way to retrieve legal documents?

This paper from Norway suggests that legal information sources ” have a rich and homogeneneous structure which makes it possible to establish chronological, alphabetical and systematic indexes,” something we tell our students over and over and over again.

Is searching the best way to retrieve legal documents?

By Trygve Harvold

Lov&Data nr. 98 – Juni 2009

Abstract:

Legal texts have a rich structure and a large number of links which can be utilized in retrieving documents.  This paper is based on a numerical study of the link structure in approximately 200,000 documents in the Lovdata database.  The hypertext structure is analyzed and it is suggested that it should be possible to navigate the database on the basis of indexes and links.  Analysis of the use of Lovdata also indicated that utilizing chronological and alphabetical indexes and the hyperstructure of links might in many cases be a more efficient and use-friendly way of finding documents than the traditional search.

 

Conclusion:

While searching is a necessary and powerful tool, it may not always be the most user-friendly way of locating documents in a legal information system.  In this paper we have shown how the rich structure and numerous links of legal documents allow for the construction of indexes, buttons and links which makes it possible for users to navigate the system without searching.  User statistics from Lovdata show that users often prefer this alternative way of navigation in situations where it is possible and practical.

 

The paper is rich with persuasive illustrations.

Geeks seek to make the law Googleable; RECAP in WSJ

Buried on page W13 of today’s Wall Street Journal  is a must-read piece by Katherine Mangu-Ward, “Transparency Chic.”

As the author makes clear:

. . . no aspect of government remains more locked down than the secretive, hierarchical judicial branch. Digital records of court filings, briefs and transcripts sit behind paywalls like Lexis and Westlaw. Legal codes and judicial documents aren’t copyrighted, but governments often cut exclusive distribution deals, rendering other access methods a bit legally questionable. . . .

Which leads her to discuss RECAP:

. . . [Stephen Schultz, Tim Lee and Harlan Wu] whipped up a sleek little add-on to the popular Firefox Internet browser called RECAP (PACER spelled backward). Legit users of the federal court system download it. Then each time they drop eight pennies, it deposits a copy of the page in the free Internet archive. This data joins other poached information, all of which is formatted, relabeled and made searchable—the kind of customer service government tends to skimp on. . . .

This might be the first mainstream press mention of RECAP, which is something we are all abuzz about here.

The author of the Wall Street Journal piece, Katherine Mangu-Ward, a senior editor at Reason magazine, is apparently a bit of a geek herself, giving a Twitter shoutout to those who helped her write the piece:

@kmanguward Thanks @binarybits @carlmalamud @cshirky @evwayne for info, perspective, and snappy quotes in “Transparency Chic” http://tinyurl.com/navyvj

@evwayne is, of course, our very own Erika Wayne who was interviewed for the piece.

A Note on RECAP’s Commitment to Privacy

Posted on the RECAP site today:

A Note on RECAP’s Commitment to Privacy

We’ve gotten our first official reaction from the judiciary, in the form of a statement on the New Mexico Bankruptcy court’s website. It contains two important points about the PACER terms of use, and a misleading statement about privacy that we want to correct.

First, the good news: the court acknowledges the point we’ve made before: use of RECAP is consistent with the law and the PACER terms of use. The only potential exception is if you’ve received a fee waiver for PACER. In that case, use of RECAP could violate the terms of the fee waiver, which reads: “Any transfer of data obtained as the result of a fee exemption is prohibited unless expressly authorized by the court.” We’re not lawyers, so we don’t know if the court’s interpretation is correct, but we encourage our users to honor the terms of the fee waiver.

Now, an important correction. The statement raises the concern that RECAP could compromise sealed or private documents that attorneys access via the CM/ECF, the system attorneys use for electronic filing and retrieval of documents in pending cases. Protecting privacy is our top priority, and we specifically designed RECAP to safeguard the privacy of CM/ECF documents. As we describe
in our privacy FAQ
, RECAP is carefully designed not to upload documents from the CM/ECF system. When a user logs into the CM/ECF system, a cookie is set on the user’s browser that’s different from the cookie that’s set when a user is logged into the public PACER system. RECAP monitors for this cookie and automatically deactivates itself whenever the user is logged into CM/ECF. We tested this thoroughly, with some CM/ECF users, before we released the public beta.

We’re confident that RECAP maintains the security model set up by the courts, and that it will never upload documents while a user is logged into CM/ECF. The code is open source, so anyone with concerns is welcome to inspect it for themselves. We’d like to work with the judiciary in the coming weeks to ensure they understand how RECAP protects privacy and security, and to incorporate any further enhancements they might suggest. In the meantime, users can continue using RECAP with the knowledge that it’s designed with privacy as our top priority.

2 new working papers on judicial opinions

“Judges and Their Editors”

Albany Government Law Review, Forthcoming
University of Missouri School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2009-18

DOUGLAS E. ABRAMS, University of Missouri School of Law

This essay discusses the roles of personal law clerks, central staff clerks, and Reporters of Decisions in editing judges’ opinions at the drafting stage. “The overarching lesson [is] that by submerging pride of authorship during an opinion’s gestation and by weighing editorial input with an open mind, judges secure in their craft advance the interests of justice.” The essay also discusses the constraints imposed by the ABA Model Code of Judicial Conduct on the circle of persons a judge may consult without giving the parties advance notice. The essay is adapted from Prof. Abrams’ address to the international meeting of the Association of Reporters of Judicial Decisions in Halifax, Nova Scotia on August 7, 2009.

 

“Sports in the Courts: The Role of Sports References in Judicial Opinions”

DOUGLAS E. ABRAMS, University of Missouri School of Law
Villanova Sports and Entertainment Law Journal, Forthcoming
University of Missouri School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2009-19

In cases with no claims or defenses concerning sports, the Supreme Court and lower federal and state courts frequently publish opinions that draw analogies to the rules or terminology of sports familiar to broad segments of the American people. Sports analogies can help the court explain factual or legal points because today’s generation, including the lawyers and litigants who comprise the prime audience for written opinions, grew into adulthood amid an unprecedented saturation of professional and amateur sports in the broadcast and print media, and more recently on the Internet.

This article surveys the broad array of sports whose references now lace written judicial opinions, and then discusses the use and misuse of these references. Sports references can help courts explain and resolve complexity, but may also implicate Rule 1.3 of the Model Code of Judicial Conduct by detracting unacceptably from the prestige indispensable to the judicial role. A sports reference remains incompatible with judging when a reasonable reader would conclude that the court invoked it primarily for the judge’s personal pleasure and not to facilitate the communication of ideas.

 

Source:  LSN: University of Missouri School of Law Legal Studies Research
 Paper Series Vol. 4 No. 4,  08/20/2009