The Open Law Project

April 10, 2007

Niche bloggers threatening legal publishers?

I came across a post on Lexblog over the weekend titled “Niche bloggers could threaten legal publishers” which I found pretty interesting. The post referred to another post by Ron Friedmann where he pointed out that publishing tools like blogs, wikis and podcasts enable law firms and other publishers to publish legal content very easily and potentially to a pretty big audience, thus potentially threatening legal publishers.

This is pretty much what the Open Law Project is - an initiative to harness the knowledge of the community and publish legal content using these publishing tools. This is a threat to the legal publishers who tend to publish their content behind a walled garden. Of course they have quite a bit of legal content at their disposal but as independent publishers start to publish content of a similar quality and perhaps even quantity, legal publishers will start to lose their grip in the market, especially if the independently produced content is free.

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March 17, 2007

The Open Law Project

Filed under: Blogs and blogging, Open law sites — Paul @ 2:36 pm

This is the companion blog for the Open Law Project.

There are very few sources of legal content in South Africa on South African law. Google can be tremendously helpful in finding what is available but, as yet, there is no single comprehensive legal reference work on the Web on South African law. The problem with this is that South Africans are governed and affected by South African law and this law is not very accessible to them.

The Open Law Project is an initiative aimed at creating a comprehensive and reliable legal reference work that is created by the South African legal community and which is available to South Africans who have access to an Internet connection and a web browser for free. The intention is to make the content on this site available for free to the South African public, the content posted to this site can not be subject to copyright. Copyright makes the content less accessible. That being said, contributions from all members of the South African legal community are most welcome and appreciated. This is an opportunity to contribute back to the South African public.

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