Top 10 in Law Blogs : LXBN September 27, 2012
September 27, 2012
In legal marketing, the question is no longer whether or not law firms should use video—but how they should use it. As part of our advance coverage of the LMA Technology Conference, Bloomberg’s Ed Adams has some ideas. In the roundup, Vladimir Gagic and Daniel Koewler comment on a big Supreme Court case coming. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 171.
- Should Police Have to Get a Warrant Before Drawing a DUI Suspect’s Blood? – Phoenix lawyer Vladimir Gagic on his blog, the Arizona Criminal Law & Sex Crimes Post
- On the Chamber of Commerce, the Skills Gap and Mike Rowe’s Letter to Governor Romney – New York lawyer Dennis Cariello of DLA Piper on their blog, the Education Industry Reporter
- U.S. Supreme Court To Decide if DWI Laws Are Unconstitutional – Roseville, MN attorney Daniel Koewler of Ramsay Law Firm on the firm’s blog, Minnesota DWI Defense
- Workers Wanted Desperately Needed: Searching for a Solution to the Foreign Agricultural Labor Shortage – Omaha, Nebraska attorney Sean Minahan of Lamson, Dugan and Murray on his blog, the Midwest Agricultural Law Guide
- There’s a new sheriff in town: government announces Interim Commissioner of Competition – Toronto lawyer Kevin Ackhurst on the firm’s blog, Deal Law Wire
- Surveys Reveal Surprisingly Common Data Security Shortcomings – Washington, DC lawyer Josephine Liu of Covington & Burling on the firm’s blog, Inside Privacy
- Police Use Facebook To Track Down Delinquent Dad – Spartanburg attorney J. Benjamin Stevens of The Stevens Firm on their South Carolina Family Law Blog
- Election 2012: What Debate Questions Would You Ask Rep. Paul Ryan – Hartford attorney Daniel Schwartz of Pullman & Comley in his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Public Comment: Word Counts But Kindergarten Fonts – Houston lawyer Kendall Gray of Andrews Kurth on his blog, The Appellate Record
- Free Speech and That YouTube Video – Patrick Maines, president of The Media Institute, at the Institute’s Media & Communications Policy Blog
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