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In the world of e-commerce advising, the Internet is a powerful research tool for lawyers, and there's more than one route to conducting on-point, effective online research.
Consider: Two very different Web sites offer two surprisingly similar lessons in how a site's structure and organization can make all the difference in its usefulness. One, LawyerLinks, is a new corporate law research service that so effectively organizes its materials using a topical index that its developers see no need to include full-text searching.
The other, the recently redesigned Web site of the Defense Research Institute (DRI), offers a lesson in how portlets ' small customizable content panes ' can be used to dramatically enhance a site's navigability.
Let's start with LawyerLinks. While its no-search approach might seem radical, it initially struck me as retro. Upon first using it, I remembered long-ago days of hard-copy research when my initial approach to a problem might have been to pick up a treatise and browse its table of contents. Finding a chapter that seemed on point, I would read it for an overview of the key legal issues and considerations. LawyerLinks is somewhat like that treatise of old, with a significant difference ' it goes far deeper into the topic than any print treatise ever could. Its developers say they designed it to reflect the way lawyers work. I think they've succeeded.
The concept is simple: LawyerLinks organizes all its materials using an index of key terms and phrases. The index is made up of more than 1,000 terms, from 10-K to hedge fund registration to variable interest entities. Materials are also organized by topics, such as Delaware corporate law. These terms and topics are further organized into broader collections, among them SEC and Banking.
The left panel of your browser displays a list of topics and terms. The contents of this list vary depending on the collection you select. Click on a topic, such as asset-backed securities from the SEC collection, and the page that appears to the right provides a summary of SEC law, recent developments related to the topic, and a collection of deeper links providing more detailed information on key issues relating to assetbacked securities.
Each term and topic is the tip of an iceberg of stored information, allowing users to drill deeper and deeper into a subject, with the left-hand navigation pane always visible. Materialscontain extensive hyperlinks to related materials within the collection. The aim is to provide quick links to core information while eliminating false positives from research results. The collection is highly focused, targets corporate and securities-law matters, but includes a broad range of materials within that area, including statutes, regulations, interpretative materials and Delaware court decisions. It is also up-to-date, with new materials added daily.
So confident are LawyerLinks' developers of the intuitiveness of their index that they provide no fulltext searching. This is a shortcoming, in my view ' one the developers say they may eventually address. But its index-only approach allows users to zero in quickly on relevant results. LawyerLinks offers a 30-day free trial, after which users must select either a pay-as-you-go plan (about $1 a minute) or a group subscription of $1,495 per user per year.
Pages Of Portlets
The DRI site also illustrates how navigational elements can dramatically enhance usability. DRI is a national association of defense lawyers, and much of its site is restricted to members. DRI recently redesigned its site and provided me a temporary password to explore the new features. Its objectives:
To achieve this, DRI made effective use of two distinct types of page elements ' a navigation banner and content portlets. Every page of the site displays the same banner across the top. It contains tabs that serve as the site's primary navigation tools. The tabs point to general sections of the site: About DRI, Committees, CLE Programs. Mousing over any tab displays a list of subsections. The banner ensures that users are never more than one click away from anywhere within the site. On each page, content is organized within portlets (boxes arranged in columns). Some appear on every page of the site, with others in only the sections to which they relate; others can be added or removed based on user preferences. You can minimize any portlet so that the portlet appears as only a title bar, and then expand it again when needed.
Once logged in, two portlets appear on every page: DRI Service Center and Member Service Center. These provide quick access to membership services, event registration and key services such as the DRI's expert-witness database. Other portlets appear only in appropriate sections of the site. For example, the Litigation Services main page includes, among others, a portlet providing quick access to the Web sites of every federal and state court in the United States. These navigational elements enhance the many features DRI's site offers its members. Among the more notable of these:
DRI has long made its site a repository of useful resources for its members. Until this redesign, however, the site could be difficult to negotiate. By using consistent navigational elements and the flexibility of portlets, DRI has achieved a dramatic improvement in usability.
Together, LawyerLinks and DRI show that creative approaches to organizing content can significantly enhance a site's usefulness for its intended audience.
Robert J. Ambrogi is a lawyer and media consultant in Rockport, MA. A member of the Board of Editors of e-Commerce Law & Strategy's sibling newsletter Internet Law & Strategy, he can be reached at [email protected]. Bob's legal blog, www.legaline.com/lawsites.html, is one of the most respected.
In the world of e-commerce advising, the Internet is a powerful research tool for lawyers, and there's more than one route to conducting on-point, effective online research.
Consider: Two very different Web sites offer two surprisingly similar lessons in how a site's structure and organization can make all the difference in its usefulness. One, LawyerLinks, is a new corporate law research service that so effectively organizes its materials using a topical index that its developers see no need to include full-text searching.
The other, the recently redesigned Web site of the Defense Research Institute (DRI), offers a lesson in how portlets ' small customizable content panes ' can be used to dramatically enhance a site's navigability.
Let's start with LawyerLinks. While its no-search approach might seem radical, it initially struck me as retro. Upon first using it, I remembered long-ago days of hard-copy research when my initial approach to a problem might have been to pick up a treatise and browse its table of contents. Finding a chapter that seemed on point, I would read it for an overview of the key legal issues and considerations. LawyerLinks is somewhat like that treatise of old, with a significant difference ' it goes far deeper into the topic than any print treatise ever could. Its developers say they designed it to reflect the way lawyers work. I think they've succeeded.
The concept is simple: LawyerLinks organizes all its materials using an index of key terms and phrases. The index is made up of more than 1,000 terms, from 10-K to hedge fund registration to variable interest entities. Materials are also organized by topics, such as Delaware corporate law. These terms and topics are further organized into broader collections, among them SEC and Banking.
The left panel of your browser displays a list of topics and terms. The contents of this list vary depending on the collection you select. Click on a topic, such as asset-backed securities from the SEC collection, and the page that appears to the right provides a summary of SEC law, recent developments related to the topic, and a collection of deeper links providing more detailed information on key issues relating to assetbacked securities.
Each term and topic is the tip of an iceberg of stored information, allowing users to drill deeper and deeper into a subject, with the left-hand navigation pane always visible. Materialscontain extensive hyperlinks to related materials within the collection. The aim is to provide quick links to core information while eliminating false positives from research results. The collection is highly focused, targets corporate and securities-law matters, but includes a broad range of materials within that area, including statutes, regulations, interpretative materials and Delaware court decisions. It is also up-to-date, with new materials added daily.
So confident are LawyerLinks' developers of the intuitiveness of their index that they provide no fulltext searching. This is a shortcoming, in my view ' one the developers say they may eventually address. But its index-only approach allows users to zero in quickly on relevant results. LawyerLinks offers a 30-day free trial, after which users must select either a pay-as-you-go plan (about $1 a minute) or a group subscription of $1,495 per user per year.
Pages Of Portlets
The DRI site also illustrates how navigational elements can dramatically enhance usability. DRI is a national association of defense lawyers, and much of its site is restricted to members. DRI recently redesigned its site and provided me a temporary password to explore the new features. Its objectives:
To achieve this, DRI made effective use of two distinct types of page elements ' a navigation banner and content portlets. Every page of the site displays the same banner across the top. It contains tabs that serve as the site's primary navigation tools. The tabs point to general sections of the site: About DRI, Committees, CLE Programs. Mousing over any tab displays a list of subsections. The banner ensures that users are never more than one click away from anywhere within the site. On each page, content is organized within portlets (boxes arranged in columns). Some appear on every page of the site, with others in only the sections to which they relate; others can be added or removed based on user preferences. You can minimize any portlet so that the portlet appears as only a title bar, and then expand it again when needed.
Once logged in, two portlets appear on every page: DRI Service Center and Member Service Center. These provide quick access to membership services, event registration and key services such as the DRI's expert-witness database. Other portlets appear only in appropriate sections of the site. For example, the Litigation Services main page includes, among others, a portlet providing quick access to the Web sites of every federal and state court in the United States. These navigational elements enhance the many features DRI's site offers its members. Among the more notable of these:
DRI has long made its site a repository of useful resources for its members. Until this redesign, however, the site could be difficult to negotiate. By using consistent navigational elements and the flexibility of portlets, DRI has achieved a dramatic improvement in usability.
Together, LawyerLinks and DRI show that creative approaches to organizing content can significantly enhance a site's usefulness for its intended audience.
Robert J. Ambrogi is a lawyer and media consultant in Rockport, MA. A member of the Board of Editors of e-Commerce Law & Strategy's sibling newsletter Internet Law & Strategy, he can be reached at [email protected]. Bob's legal blog, www.legaline.com/lawsites.html, is one of the most respected.
This article highlights how copyright law in the United Kingdom differs from U.S. copyright law, and points out differences that may be crucial to entertainment and media businesses familiar with U.S law that are interested in operating in the United Kingdom or under UK law. The article also briefly addresses contrasts in UK and U.S. trademark law.
The Article 8 opt-in election adds an additional layer of complexity to the already labyrinthine rules governing perfection of security interests under the UCC. A lender that is unaware of the nuances created by the opt in (may find its security interest vulnerable to being primed by another party that has taken steps to perfect in a superior manner under the circumstances.
With each successive large-scale cyber attack, it is slowly becoming clear that ransomware attacks are targeting the critical infrastructure of the most powerful country on the planet. Understanding the strategy, and tactics of our opponents, as well as the strategy and the tactics we implement as a response are vital to victory.
Possession of real property is a matter of physical fact. Having the right or legal entitlement to possession is not "possession," possession is "the fact of having or holding property in one's power." That power means having physical dominion and control over the property.
In 1987, a unanimous Court of Appeals reaffirmed the vitality of the "stranger to the deed" rule, which holds that if a grantor executes a deed to a grantee purporting to create an easement in a third party, the easement is invalid. Daniello v. Wagner, decided by the Second Department on November 29th, makes it clear that not all grantors (or their lawyers) have received the Court of Appeals' message, suggesting that the rule needs re-examination.