The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School has begun a novel research project called Openlaw.
Openlaw is an innovative litigation strategy that uses the Internet as a public commons for developing legal arguments. Eldred v. Reno, contesting the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, is the first case to be litigated using an Openlaw approach. Attorneys and law students are cordially invited to register on the Openlaw site and to participate in the brief-writing process.
Openlaw is an experiment in crafting legal argument in an open forum. With your assistance, we will develop arguments, draft pleadings, and edit briefs online. You are invited to join the process by adding thoughts to the "brainstorm" outline, drafting and commenting on drafts in progress, and suggesting reference sources. Building on the model of open source software, we believe that an open development process best harnesses the distributed resources of the Internet community. What we lose in secrecy, we expect to regain in depth of sources and breadth of argument.
We welcome all participants in our drafting process. To join the team, follow the register link on the sidebar and enter your email address and a chosen username and password (other information is optional). Registration will give you access to all portions of the openlaw site.
http://eon.law.harvard.edu/openlaw/
We'll start the process by brainstorming ideas for our legal arguments. Use threads on the discussion boards to post your ideas and respond to others. We will then pull ideas from the outline into drafts posted for collaborative critique and editing. In addition, please visit the Copyright's Commons website at http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/commons/ Please send any comments you have on the sites to Ashley Morgan <amorgan[_at_]law.harvard.edu>
Ashley Morgan and Jenny Love
via
Diane Cabell
http://www.mama-tech.com/
Fausett, Gaeta & Lund
Boston
Received on Fri Apr 16 1999 - 01:41:45 GMT
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