Above are the slides from my July 20 presentation on crowdsourcing to the American Association of Law Libraries annual meeting. When I first suggested the title, I was sure the presentation would be a positive one, demonstrating the ways in which crowdsourcing and collaboration “are changing” legal research. I have long been a believer…
Crowdsourced Research Site Casetext Raises $7M Series A Financing
As I start to make my way through some of the news I picked up at LegalTech last week, here’s a big one: The start-up legal research site Casetext announced that it has raised a $7 million Series A financing round. The round is led by Union Square Ventures…
More on Law Genius: ‘Legal Footnotes on Crack’
After my post Monday about Law Genius, a crowdsourcing site for posting and annotating legal documents, someone pointed me to this Betabeat piece from 2012…
New Crowdsourced Law Site is Part of Larger Project to ‘Annotate the World’
There is something very fitting in the fact that a site that started out deciphering rap lyrics is now turning its attention to making sense of the law.
The site, Law Genius, is the newest member of the larger Genius network of crowdsourced community sites, all of which grew out of…
CanLII Connects: Crowdsourcing Commentary on Canadian Law
Crowdsourcing the law is a concept any number of legal sites have tried over the years, as I’ve written about many times. The idea behind it makes perfect sense. There are lots of very smart legal professionals out there in the world — practitioners, academics, librarians and even law students. If they…
MIT Legal Hackathon Starts Online Tomorrow
This is a summer of legal hackathons here in the Boston area. As I’ve previously mentioned here, The the ABA Journal and Suffolk University Law School will be cosponsoring a hackathon around the theme of access to justice in conjunction with the ABA annual meeting in Boston. Hackcess…
Casetext Adds Citator, Other Features
I’ve written both here and for the ABA Journal about Casetext, a free legal research platform that uses crowdsourcing to…
After Aborted Launch, Jurify is Back with Research Tool for Transactional Lawyers
In October 2012, two longtime corporate lawyers announced the private beta launch of Jurify, which they described as the “first mass collaboration platform for lawyers and clients.” The site would focus on using crowdsourcing to enhance access to legal research. “Think of it as a Wikipedia for the law,”…
Two Sites Offer Platforms for Crowdsourced Legal Research
My latest “Ambrogi on Tech” column for the ABA Journal, 2 new websites offer platform for crowdsourced legal research, looks at Casetext and Mootus, two sites that bring crowdsourcing to legal research, but in somewhat different ways.…
Casetext Adds Crowdsourced Q&As
I wrote not long ago about Casetext, a new legal research site that provides free access to court opinions together with a platform for crowdsourcing references and annotations. I also