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by micks56
6309 days ago
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I doubt West, LexisNexis, or any other legal aggregator will sell the information to Google. Those companies make a lot of money selling it to lawyers on a monthly subscription basis. They also do some value-add to the materials. What I see on West or LexisNexis is more than just the publicly available decision. West and Lexis employ lawyers to create summaries and other helpful things for the legal researcher. There certainly is a lot of legal text. Lawyers certainly are good at creating volumes of paper. For example, the Supreme Court just decided a case, Wyeth v. Levine. It will be recorded in volume 555. So to date the Supreme Court decisions have filled 554 volumes of 1000 pages each. And that is just one court. Every state court, state appeals court, and state supreme court, federal court, land court, etc has similar volumes and page counts. And all of this is just the primary sources. Once you add secondary sources, aka books and papers written by learned scholars on individual topics or cases, the number of books and pages increase by orders of magnitude. And we still haven't archived any statutes (those go on forever, for each state) or any administrative law. And each one of those has comment sections that go on for pages whereas the actual rule is only a paragraph. I wonder what percentage this is, too. I bet it is still extremely small compared to what the rest of the world has produced. There are so few law writers when compared to all other writers. |
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We could certainly do with a better text search for patents.. but I wonder if thats possible unless a form of restricted prose is used that makes the text less obtuse/verbose.
Maybe an algorithm can reduce the common legal motifs and replace them with shorter versions thus refactoring legal-speak into human-readable prose on which text search can be effective.
[ For some reason this reminds me of the law student drama series 'the paper chase'. ]
How well is the information hyper-linked? Presumably one paper references many previous rulings, and youd jump around a lot in researching issues.