World leaders should not be given an exception on social media to publish otherwise intolerable speech.
read moreIn Memoriam — Clayton Christensen (1952-2020)
I added this to my course syllabus, “Law 2.0”: This year’s class is dedicated to the memory of Prof. Clayton Christensen, Harvard Business School, who passed away on January 23, 2020. Prof. Christensen’s seminal work, “The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms To Fail”, is perhaps the single most predictive work of how […]
read moreDefining the Problem — Regulating Behavior
Retribution for its own sake is certainly questionable for a vacuum cleaner.
read moreThe Naughty Vacuum Cleaner: (Re-)defining Free Will
I have a couple of robotic vacuum cleaners. I named one of them “Lil Miss Naughty” and the other “Dr. Evil”. The first one has a tendency to leave some spots a bit messy. The second one likes to attack cords and rugs. No matter what I say to them, they don’t change their behavior. […]
read moreLiving as a Verb
Living and working intentionally
read moreLaw Librarians: The Hidden Bastions of Data-Driven Innovation
It is not uncommon to hear of venture capital’s hesitancy to invest in legal tech startups. The challenges are many: a long sales cycle, cultural conservatism and entrenched processes to name a few. Within the academic community, we’ve heard a similar reason for not investing in evolving and increasingly important legal tools. A law school […]
read moreDeath By A Thousand Cuts — In Gratitude
Larry Page once told me, back in the early days of Google, not to continue with failing projects. “Either find a way to move it forward,” he said, “or move on to something else.” This mindset is not really that different from the Serenity Prayer. The hard part, especially for social change, is the balance […]
read moreLegal Disruption? Uhm, It’s Complicated
A few months back, while I was still at Stanford (I’m now at Harvard Law’s CLP), I explored the nature of disruption in Big Law. I wanted to focus on Big Law because it is perhaps the component of the overall legal system at least as likely to experience disruption as any other. At the end […]
read moreMeasuring the Subjective
Abstract This article describes a generalized approach to measuring subjective notions of quality. It shows how using a particular mathematical framework can yield several beneficial properties. These properties allow for measurements of complex, subjective notions of value or quality that are intuitive and easily tailored to a particular individual and data set. This example shows […]
read moreUPL, Technology, and Access to Justice
I was asked to participate on a panel at the ABA’s Center for Professional Responsibility’s 2nd UPL School in Chicago on April 17th. The panel topic was “The Users and Abusers: Technology and the Unauthorized Practice of Law“. I’d written a guest blog at MyCase in 2013 called “Using A Document Automation System – Authorized […]
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