HBR blogger Dan Pallotta reviews five strains of the jargonism epidemic at I Don’t Understand What Anyone Is Saying Anymore. You can also listen to Dan explain why we still use jargon even though we hate it, and vote for…
Posts Tagged ‘Blogger’
If Only Lawyers Really Were Ethically Obligated to Monitor the Accuracy of Online Legal Search Services and Required to Obtain Detailed Infomation about Vendors’ Editor Qualifications and Search Algorithms
Carolyn Elefant is a well-respected attorney-blogger but in a recent post on a proposed new Comment to ABA Ethic Rule 5.3, I think she has over-reached to infinity and beyond in her interpretation. The proposed new comment reads in full:…
Girls (Strike out that) Law Profs Gone Wild
The once anonymous “LawProf” blogger of Inside the Law School Scam has identified himself. As most readers of LLB know, Mark Giangrande reported that he is Colorado Law prof Paul Campos. I don’t know if the WSJ Law Blog broke…
As the World Turns: Welcome to the Blogosphere Inside the Law School Scam
A “LawProf” Sampler Welcome to My Nightmare What does it mean to call law school a scam? Understanding the rage of recent law school graduates There has been a fair amount of speculation about an anonymous blogger who recently joined…
A New Genre: ISP Data Cap Policy Killed My Internet
In Data Caps Are Screwing Things Up, Public Knowledge blogger Michael Weinberg writes “[t]he story of Andre Vrignaud may well end up being the template for the soon-to-be-popular genre of ‘I just hit my data cap and now I cannot…
On the Peasant-Landload Relationship in the Ancien Regime: Ignoring Tradition-Bound "Professional" Rhetorical Norms of Restraint and Civility to Promote Reforms
The “scam blogger” movement refers to those in the law-related blogoshere who criticize the legal academy for continuing to spin the story of “Come to law school. Sure, you’ll take out loans, but it will all be worth it in…