LexBlog Law Network Roundup 8/20/2009
August 20, 2009
On days like today it’s difficult to limit myself to just ten posts for our daily roundup. Kate Bladow posed the interesting question of whether or not blogging can fulfill a lawyer’s yearly pro bono requirement. A New York State Supreme Court judge recently ordered Google to reveal the identity of a blogger who had insulted model Liskula Cohen. Joseph Rosenbaum had some thoughts regarding the free speech arguments found in that case. Finally, Doug Powell on BarfBlog caught my eye with a South Park reference. Enjoy.
- Can Lawyers Blog to Fulfill Pro Bono Responsibility? – Public interest law and technology expert Kate Bladow on technola
- Court Orders Google to Turn Over Blogger Identity Information – New York attorney Joseph I. Rosenbaum of Reed Smith on the firm’s blog, Legal Bytes
- What would Brian Boitano do? What would Brian Boitano make? – Food safety expert Doug Powell of the International Food Safety Network on their BarfBlog
- WWALD (What Would Ann Landers Do ??) – CAFA Style – The blogging lawyers & attorneys at McGlinchey Stafford in the firm’s CAFA Law Blog
- Privacy Advocates Alarmed – White House Proposes Change to Allow Tracking of US Government Websites – Dallas attorney Peter Vogel of Gardere Wynne Sewell on his Vogel Internet, Information Technology and e-Discovery Blog
- What Can The Green Building World Learn From The Health Care Debate? – St. Petersburg LEED AP Richard Cartlidge on his blog, Green Building & Environmental Trends
- Senator Writes Letter To NIH About “Ghostwriting” – Pennsylvania attorney Sean Wajert of Dechert LLP in his Mass Tort Defense Blog
- Religion in Public Schools – A Review of Some Recent Cases – Pennsylvania attorney Tim Gilsbach of Fox Rothschild on the firm’s Education Law Blog
- Is Business Litigation Just Another Method of Negotiating? – Minneapolis attorney Gavin Craig on his Twin Cities Business Litigation Blog
- Battle Over Nets Arena Site Continues – Philadelphia lawyer David Snyder of Fox Rothschild on the firm’s Eminent Domain Blog
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