At 09:48 PM 8/23/2001 +0100, r.duke@freedom.net wrote:
Mind you, most of the lawyers I've spoken to seem feel that the Internet is nothing new, legally. This leads me to think that lawyers on the whole, are not particularly imaginative or attentive people.
An alternate explanation might be that our legal tradition goes back, in some cases, to Roman times, and has already proven flexible and adaptable enough to encompass whatever flavor-of-the-week technologists are excited about now. It's not like technological change, in itself, is unheard of. What exactly is it that you think is new about the Internet, legally speaking?
They also have a newsletter, "The Filter," which is sometimes interesting. This year they started running a 5-day "Internet Law Program of Instruction," if you happen to have a spare $2500.
Oh hurrah. A bargain.
That's not bad, as things go, for a week of classes, if they're giving MCLE credits and have a nice continental breakfast. It's not like the attendees are expected to pay for this out of their own pockets. -- Greg Broiles gbroiles@well.com "We have found and closed the thing you watch us with." -- New Delhi street kids