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Law Magazine review

The Law Magazine And Review: For Both Branches Of The Legal Profession At Home And Abroad... by Nabu Press

Law Magazines


The Law Magazine And Review: For Both Branches Of The Legal Profession At Home And Abroad...

Anonymous (Paperback) Nabu Press 2012-03-22


Price: $34.75 $19.95

Publishing a book review?

Im self-publishing a small magazine, and I wanted to do a section where im doing book reviews. But im not familiar with copyright laws in this area... Do I need the author's or publisher's permission to publish a review about their book, and to...


While laws regarding fair use are not hard and fast, and much is left to the interpretation of the courts, your reviews probably count as fair use and would not require permission.

Can anyone review my essay?

Ninety five million Americans alone own the rights to cellular devices, and the numbers are sky rocketing. The total number of cell phone related car accidents causes “2,600 deaths and 330,000 injuries in the United States every year”...


Intro Paragraph
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"Ninety-five million Americans currently own cell devices, and the numbers are sky rocketing."

Hyphenate all words between twenty-one and ninety-nine. It was a little unclear at first as to

Twitter Stream

Nov 03, 2011
Law Magazines Martindale-Hubbell Peer Review Ratings basis for upcoming “Top Ranked Law Firms” report in Fortune Magazine


Oct 28, 2011
Law Magazines My brother in law breaks into print for nat'l magazine. Sure it's a binocular review, but good work!


Oct 27, 2011
Law Magazines Jerry Saltz on the Mets Galleries for the Art of the Arab Lands New York Magazine Art Review :P law of abundance


Oct 27, 2011
Law Magazines Nice article from the VS Magazine on "Nokia & Windows Phone: What Could Still Go Wrong" . But don't forget Murphy's law


Book Review: Free Ride by Robert Levine

Is that it is not the spittle-laced jeremiad of a content creator wronged but a turbo-reported (if undeniably opinionated) analysis of how we’ve arrived at this circumstance. Levine focuses on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a U.S. law passed in 1998 to address the legality or illegality of materials disseminated in digital formats. The cultural climate of the Nineties seemed to favor the tech companies that found copyright laws too strict and were, after all, ushering in the Internet Age. Addressing the “Governments of the Industrial World” in a 1996 manifesto, the sometime Grateful Dead lyricist and early digital activist John Perry Barlow declared, “I come from Cyberspace, the new home of the Mind. On behalf of the future, I ask you of the past to leave us alone.”

In Levine’s view, the promise of a lightly regulated, copyright-averse, freebie-laden Internet has unraveled much in the same way that late-Sixties experiments in free love and communal living curdled into Seventies nightmares of hard drugs, broken families, and leaky geodesic domes. In the world of news-gathering, he laments, “Aggregators like Google News and the Huffington Post excerpt or summarize the work of other publications without adding much to it, besides a link that few readers follow”—all the while competing for the same ad dollars as the endangered, cash-strapped organizations that actually put reporters on the ground. What’s more, the newspapers’ expectation that Internet ad prices would someday approach the level of print ones has not panned out. Levine cites a study that says an average print reader is worth $539 to an advertiser, while an average online reader is worth only $26.

Fortune Magazine and ALM Team up with LexisNexis Martindale ...

I mentioned to him that one effective way to help your firm stand out is to make it easy for prospective clients to see how lawyers at your firm are rated by their peers – by fellow legal professionals with first-hand knowledge of the rated lawyer’s ethical standards and legal ability. We facilitate this process through our stewardship of the Martindale-Hubbell® Peer Review Ratings™

Look for the “Top Ranked Law Firms” special report to appear in Fortune’s December 26, 2011 issue. Read on for the details .

Achieving a Peer Review Rating is a mark of distinction in the legal field and a powerful signal to buyers and referrers of legal services that the rated lawyer is worthy of their consideration. Simply achieving the rating is important but more important still is the need to promote one’s rating where it will be seen by those looking to hire you....

Read more...

Law Magazine review News

Fortune Magazine and ALM Team up with LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell to Publish ...

MarketWatch (press release) - Dec 31, 1969

Fortune partnered with ALM, the leading provider of news and information to the US legal industry, to co-produce the special section in the magazine and market it to advertisers in the industry. Martindale-Hubbell Peer Review Ratings are driven by the
Book Review: Free Ride by Robert Levine

BusinessWeek - Dec 31, 1969

Book Review: Free Ride by Robert Levine Levine, a former executive editor of Billboard magazine, is here to say that this line of thinking is, to use the clinical macroeconomics term, a load of bollocks. The model of offering up content for free and making up for this lost revenue stream
Fall 2011 Edition of Xcell Journal Magazine Available Now

Sacramento Bee - Dec 31, 1969

"The big winners are customers, as this truly brings next generation capacity – 'More than Moore's Law' – to customers today. It will be great to see what customers can do with this massive leap in capacity." Once again, Xcell Journal invites readers
Book review: 'Ether' by Ben Ehrenreich

Los Angeles Times - Dec 31, 1969

Book review: 'Ether' by Ben Ehrenreich Southern California writer Ehrenreich, who recently won a National Magazine Award for "The End," his Los Angeles magazine feature detailing the procedural odyssey from deathbed to six feet under or a pile of ashes, calls these deaths "the ordinary