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- From: heels@lcp.com (Erik J. Heels)
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- Subject: Law-Related Resources on the Internet and Elsewhere (02 of 12)
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- Archive-name: law/net-resources/part02
- Version: 6.0
-
- Chapter 0. Introduction to The Legal List.
-
- This chapter gives an overview of The Legal List and of the Internet.
-
- 0.1. About This Book - What is The Legal List?
-
- The Legal List is the short, historical, name of this book, The Legal
- List: Internet Desk Reference. (The history of my self-published version
- is briefly described below.) The purpose of The Legal List is to provide
- a consolidated list of all of the law-related resources available on the
- Internet and elsewhere. There are only two requirements for a resource
- to be listed in The Legal List: 1) it must be law-related, and 2) it
- must be on the Internet. Of course, there are exceptions to this rule.
- First, since The Legal List itself is a law-related resource on the
- Internet, I list a few resources that do not contain any Internet
- resource (e.g. only a USPS mailing address may be provided). Second, a
- few bulletin board systems (BBSs) are included. Most BBSs are accessible
- only via telephone, but more and more are becoming accessible via the
- Internet as well. Third, most of the commercial online services (such as
- Prodigy and America Online) have law-related resources that are only
- accessible to service subscribers.
-
- The Legal List was originally created in the summer of 1992 as I was
- preparing to enter the University of Maine School of Law. Before I
- started law school, I wanted to compile a list of law-related resources
- that I could use as a legal research guide. I've been on the Internet
- since 1984, when I was was a freshman at the Massachusetts Institute of
- Technology (MIT), and, through the years, I have made a habit of jotting
- down noteworthy Internet-accessible resources. In the summer of 1992,
- there were few law-related resources on the Internet, and there was no
- comprehensive listing of these resources. With my personal list of
- noteworthy Internet-accessible resources as a starting point, I started
- to compile a separate list of law-related Internet-accessible resources.
- I called this list my legal list. As I discussed with others what I had
- been doing, they began to request copies of my list. In August, 1992, I
- sent the first version of The Legal List via electronic mail (e-mail) to
- those who had requested it. Since then, The Legal List has been updated
- approximately every six months. What started as a relatively short list
- for my own use has grown into the relatively large book you are now
- reading.
-
- Today, The Legal List--or often TLL for short--is available as a
- paperback book and as an ASCII text-only file. Details of how to get The
- Legal List are included in Section 0.1.3. As the print-and-pay portion
- of the copyright notice indicates, The Legal List is free on the
- Internet, but it costs if you print it. I believe that this arrangement
- is consistent with the spirit of providing free information on the
- Internet, while at the same time allowing for a reasonable compensation
- from those who want the value-added benefit of having a paper copy of
- The Legal List. I use both the paperback version and the ASCII text-only
- version of The Legal List. If I want to find something in the ASCII
- text-only version, I open the file with my word-processing software and
- do a key-word search. With the paperback version, I look in the index.
-
- 0.1.1. Disclaimer.
-
- I am committed to providing high-quality information, and as such, I
- have tried to verify all of the information in The Legal List. If I have
- not been able to verify a resource, I have indicated so. The appearance
- of any resource in The Legal List does not constitute endorsement of
- approval of the resource by the author, editors, and publisher of The
- Legal List. The author, editor, and publisher of The Legal List have
- made reasonable efforts to provide correct information, but the author,
- editor, and publisher cannot guarantee the accuracy of the information
- in The Legal List. Updates, additions, and corrections to The Legal List
- should be sent to legal-list@lcp.com.
-
- 0.1.2. Organization of The Legal List.
-
- The Legal List is primarily organized by the sponsoring organization of
- the law-related resource. There are three main categories of sponsors:
- government organizations (Chapter 2), educational institutions (Chapter
- 3), and commercial organizations (Chapter 4). Resources that are
- sponsored primarily by an individual, and not by the organization for
- which the individual works, are included in Chapter 4, because it is
- often difficult to distinguish the sole proprietor from the hobbyist.
-
- Certain typographical conventions should also be pointed out. Items that
- should be interpreted are listed in italics. For example, If I were
- instructed to type your name, I would type Erik J. Heels. Uniform
- Resource Locators (URLs) are listed for each Internet resource. I have
- followed the draft RFC standard dated 03/94, which is available via
- anonymous FTP from internic.net as /ftp/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-uri-
- url-03.txt. The URL for the URL draft standard is
-
- URL: ftp://internic.net/ftp/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-uri-url-03.txt
-
- In general, the URL will be in the format of connection-
- method://machine/path. In the above example, the connection-method is
- FTP, the machine is internic.net, and the path is /ftp/internet-
- drafts/draft-ietf-uri-url-03.txt. In this example, the final part of the
- path name contains the file name, draft-ietf-uri-url-03.txt, but not all
- URLs contain file names.
-
- The following is a chapter summary of The Legal List:
-
- Chapter 1. Talk, Talk, Talk. This chapter describes law-related listserv
- lists, Usenet newsgroups, BBSs, and online services. Listserv lists are
- like magazines in that one can subscribe and unsubscribe. There are
- lists for a wide range of law-related interests such as intellectual
- property (CNI-Copyright), fathers rights (FREE-L), and issues of
- interest to law students (LawSch-L). Usenet is the news network that is
- intertwined with, but independent from, the Internet.
-
- Chapter 2. Government Organizations. This chapter describes law-related
- resources made available by US government organizations. An organization
- in this chapter would most likely have a domain name ending in .gov
- (government). This chapter is divided into two sub-sections: 1) US
- Federal Government Organizations and 2) US State Government
- Organizations.
-
- Chapter 3. Educational Institutions. This chapter describes law-related
- resources made available by US educational institutions. An organization
- in this chapter would most likely have a domain name ending in .edu
- (education). This chapter is divided into two sub-sections: 1) US law
- schools, 2) other US educational institutions.
-
- Chapter 4. Corporations and Organizations. This chapter describes law-
- related resources made available by for-profit, nonprofit, and not-for-
- profit corporations and organizations. An organization in this chapter
- would most likely have a domain name ending in .com (commercial) or .org
- (organization). Law firms are listed separately--sorted by the state (or
- country) of their main office. This chapter also includes resources
- primarily made available by individuals rather than by an organizations,
- governments, or educational institutions.
-
- Chapter 5. Non-US Resources. This chapter describes law-related
- resources made available by non-US organizations, governments, and
- educational institutions including those made available by the United
- Nations.
-
- Appendix A. More About the Internet. This appendix contains, for
- example, information about Internet account and domain providers.
-
- 0.1.3. How to Get Paperback and Electronic Copies of The Legal
- List.
-
- Listserv Lists
-
- There are two listserv lists available:
-
- 1) Full text delivery of The Legal List - legal-list.
-
- The Legal List is available via e-mail via the listserv list legal-
- list@lcp.com.
-
- To subscribe to legal-list, send a message with subscribe legal-list
- your name in the body of the message to the following address.
-
- URL: mailto:listserv@lcp.com
-
- The next version of The Legal List (as well as other announcements) will
- be mailed to those who subscribe. I always like to hear where you
- learned about The Legal List, so if you also include this information in
- the body of the message, I would greatly appreciate it!
-
- To cancel your subscription to legal-list, send a message with
- unsubscribe legal-list in the body of the message to the following
- address.
-
- URL: mailto:listserv@lcp.com
-
- 2) Announcements only - TLL-announce.
-
- If you wish receive only announcements about the next version of The
- Legal List, send a message with subscribe TLL-announce your name in the
- body of the message to the following address.
-
- URL: mailto:listserv@lcp.com
-
- TLL-announce subscribes will receive all of the announcements that
- legal-list subscribers receive, but TLL-announce subscribers will not
- receive the next version of The Legal List via e-mail. I always like to
- hear where you learned about The Legal List, so if you also include this
- information in the body of the message, I would greatly appreciate it!
-
- To cancel your subscription to TLL-announce, send a message with
- unsubscribe TLL-announce in the body of the message to the following
- address.
-
- URL: mailto:listserv@lcp.com
-
- Internet Servers (FTP, Gopher, and WWW).
- The Legal List is available via anonymous FTP, Gopher, and WWW:
-
- URL: ftp://ftp.lcp.com/pub/LegalList/legallist.txt
- URL: gopher://gopher.lcp.com
- URL: http://www.lcp.com
-
- The InterNIC.
-
- The Legal List is one of many resources officially documented by the
- InterNIC Directory and Database Services maintained by the NSF Network
- Systems Center (NNSC) under a contract with AT&T. The Internet Resource
- Guide (IRG) (formerly compiled and maintained by BBN, Inc., for the
- NNSC) has been moved to the Directory of Directories provided by the
- InterNIC Directory and Database Services. In previous versions of The
- Legal List, I wrote [t]he [IRG] is invaluable, and everyone with a
- serious interest in the Internet should maintain a copy. The NNSC's
- stated goal is to expose users to those facilities that will help them
- do their work better. (Internet Resource Guide, Introduction, dated 16
- Apr 90.) I wholeheartedly agree with this goal. Although the IRG in its
- 1990-form is being discontinued, the entries have been incorporated into
- the NNSC's new Directory of Directories. The Directory of Directories
- should prove to be an invaluable resource.
-
- For more information, contact:
-
- The InterNIC Directory and Database Services Administrator
- AT&T
- 5000 Hadley Road Room 1B13
- South Plainfield, NJ 07080
- Phone: 1-800-862-0677
- E-mail: admin@ds.internic.net
-
- URL: mailto:admin@ds.internic.net
- URL: gopher://gopher.internic.net/
- URL: http://www.internic.net/
-
- Usenet FAQ.
-
- The Legal List is periodically posted as a FAQ (a file of Frequently-
- Asked Questions) to misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.answers, and
- news.answers. It is also available (in about 10 parts) via e-mail and
- anonymous FTP from MIT's Usenet archives. To obtain a copy via e-mail
- from MIT, send a message with the following lines in it (there may be
- more than 10 parts) to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu:
-
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part1
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part2
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part3
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part4
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part5
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part6
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part7
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part8
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part9
- send usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-resources/part10
- quit
-
- URL: mailto:mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu
- URL: ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-group/news.answers/law/net-
- resources/
-
- Paperback Copies.
-
- Paperback copies of The Legal List are available from Lawyers
- Cooperative Publishing. The paperback copies are superior in quality to
- the text-only versions distributed on the Internet (e.g. multiple fonts
- are used). The price for each copy is $29.95. The shipping and handling
- for each copy is $3.00 US, $4.00 Canada or Mexico, and $10.00 for all
- other countries. To receive a paperback copy of The Legal List, please
- send, e-mail, or fax a purchase order; or send a check or money order
- payable to Lawyers Cooperative Publishing to:
-
- Lawyers Cooperative Publishing
- Attn: The Legal List
- Aqueduct Building
- Rochester, NY 14694
- USA
- Phone: 1-800-254-5274
- Fax: 1-800-741-1414
- E-mail: TLL-orders@lcp.com
-
- Please allow one to two weeks for delivery via United States Postal
- Services mail.
-
- Updates, Additions, and Corrections.
-
- Updates, additions, and corrections to The Legal List should be sent to
- legal-list@.lcp.com.
-
- URL: mailto:legal-list@lcp.com
-
- 0.2. About the Internet - A Brief Primer on the Internet.
-
- In the last few years, the Internet has become more user-friendly.
- Today, it can be a practical tool for the legal professional.
-
- 0.2.1. What Is the Internet?
-
- A computer network is simply two or more computers connected by wires.
- Computer networks allow interconnected users to share printers and
- files. When one network is connected with another, a internet (lowercase
- i) is formed. The Internet (uppercase I) is the international network of
- interconnected computer networks. Buzzwords like the information
- superhighway, cyberspace, and the national information infrastructure,
- which may be nicknames for the Internet or planned government or
- industry initiatives, are not helpful to understanding what the Internet
- is. Estimates of the number of individuals on the Internet vary widely,
- but it is safe to say there there are probably 50 million users
- worldwide. This makes the Internet the worlds second-largest
- communication network, after the telephone network.
-
- The Internet and the telephone network are not mutually-exclusive--many
- of the computers on the Internet are connected by various types of phone
- lines. Like the telephone network, it matters less to the end user how
- the technology works, and more how to use the technology. A notable
- difference between the Internet and the telephone network is that
- electronic mail (e-mail) sent to users outside of ones home country
- typically costs the same (at least for the end user) as e-mail sent to
- users within ones home country. As a result, individuals from all over
- the world can meet on the Internet in virtual communities, communities
- whose existence is fueled by low-cost Internet access.
-
- Like any other community, the Internet has rules of etiquette called
- netiquette. A quick summary of the rules of etiquette: Never say
- anything in an e-mail message (or a news posting) that you wouldn't say
- to the recipients face or that you wouldn't say in a long-distance phone
- call (i.e. realize that some users pay for incoming e-mail). The power
- to send e-mail--essentially instantly--to anyone in the world is great,
- and it should be understood.
-
- 0.2.2. Internet History - From Research to Prime Time.
-
- The Internet grew out ARPAnet (formed in 1969 as a product of the
- Advanced Research Project Agency), a network of government computers
- connected so that they could exchange information and use each others
- programs. ARPAnet was later discontinued, but other networks (primarily
- government and educational) had been formed and interconnected, and the
- resulting network of networks has come to be known as the Internet. The
- networks that are part of the Internet speak the same language, the
- TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) protocols. Some
- of the computers on these networks themselves use the TCP/IP protocols
- (most notably UNIX-based computers) while others (for example, the
- computers that comprise the commercial online services such as
- CompuServe, America Online, and Delphi; as well as those computers on
- BITNET and UUCP networks) do not but are still able to use some TCP/IP
- protocols via gateways.
-
- In 1992, two significant events occurred. First, many of the
- restrictions on commercial use of the Internet were relaxed. Much of the
- Internet's traffic shifted from the National Science Foundations NSFNet
- backbone to commercial networks (such as the Commercial Internet
- Exchange, CIX). Second, and perhaps more significantly, we had a vice
- presidential candidate who had heard of the Internet--and who was
- interested in its potential. These two events resulted in a tremendous
- amount of coverage of the Internet in the popular press. In fact in
- 1993, there were more references to the Internet in The New York Times
- than in all previous years combined! And the trend is continuing.
-
- 0.2.3. How to Get On the Internet.
-
- As more people get on the Internet, fewer people will be able to ignore
- the Internet. Do you remember when you added your fax number to your
- business card? It may not be long until you add your Internet e-mail
- address as well. For those lawyers who want to communicate with their
- clients via the Internet (because there surely will be clients who want
- to do so) or who want to shape the future of the law of the Internet,
- now is the time to get on. Heres how.
-
- 0.2.3.1. Commercial Online Services.
-
- The quickest way to get on the Internet is to get an account on one of
- the commercial online services. Currently, the five largest national
- commercial online services are Prodigy, CompuServe, America Online,
- GEnie, and Delphi. Also, there are online services tailored specifically
- for the legal professional (such as Lexis Counsel Connect and Law
- Journal Extra). All of these services offer Internet e-mail, and several
- offer other Internet tools (discussed further below). Also, many offer
- free trial periods and home-access software (much like the Lexis and
- Westlaw software that you may already have). Call and ask for details
- (see the Appendix for addresses and phone numbers of commercial online
- services). For about $10-20 per month, you can ask questions and
- electronically look over peoples shoulders to learn about the Internet.
-
- 0.2.3.2. Reading about the Internet.
-
- Once you are on the Internet, it is relatively easy to find out more
- about the Internet itself. Your Internet provider most likely has
- Internet-related information available online.
-
- One source of information about the Internet available from numerous
- sites on the Internet is the Request For Comments (RFCs). The RFCs were
- originally electronic documents that were circulated for comments and
- that described a new protocol that was needed to help the computers
- connected to the Internet work together more effectively. Today, these
- documents are still referred to as RFCs because each is open for comment
- and subject change as the Internet evolves.
-
- Certain RFCs have remained unchanged for long periods of time and have
- become Internet standards. In addition to documenting standard
- protocols, the RFCs document the history of the Internet since 1969 and
- provide help and information for new Internet users.
-
- To receive introductory information on the Internet via e-mail, send a
- message with document-by-name rfc1594 in the body of the message to
- mailserv@ds.internic.net. You will receive RFC number 1594, Questions
- and Answers for New Internet Users. To receive an index of RFCs (there
- are about 1,800), include document-by-name rfc-index in the text of your
- message. The RFCs can be a road map (or a treasure map) for you if you
- enjoy exploring in this manner.
-
- If you'd rather have books by your side before you get on the Internet,
- you might want to get Brendan P. Kehoe's Zen and the Art of the
- Internet: A Beginners Guide to the Internet (Prentice-Hall, Englewood
- Cliffs, NJ), which is a brief, well-written, easy-to-read overview of
- the Internet. Also, you might want to pick up a copy of Ed Krol's The
- Whole Internet Users Guide and Catalog, Second Edition (O'Reilly &
- Associates, Inc., Sabastopol, CA), which is a comprehensive and clear
- guide to the Internet and is considered essential for new Internet
- users. Finally to learn more about netiquette, read Virginia Shea's
- Netiquette (Albion Books, San Francisco, CA), which documents the
- formerly-unwritten rules of Internet etiquette.
-
- 0.2.3.3. Beyond Dial-In Accounts.
-
- Consider registering your own Internet domain name (the part of an e-
- mail address to the right of the @ sign), rather than just having an
- individual account (the part of an e-mail address to the left of the @
- sign) on somebody else's machine. This is more expensive than simply
- purchasing an account with a commercial online service, but there are
- inexpensive options (such as asynchronous dial-up PPP (Point to Point
- Protocol) and UUCP (Unix to Unix Copy Protocol) accounts), and you will
- gain flexibility and control. For example, you could set up your own FTP
- server, and your e-mail address would be yourname@your-company.com
- rather than yourname@somewhere-else.com. See the Appendix for a listing
- of some Internet domain providers.
-
- 0.2.4. A Brief Primer on Some Internet Tools.
-
- There are five Internet tools that you may want to use in your research:
- e-mail, FTP, Gopher, WWW, and WAIS. (Also, you may want to try a local
- BBS.) There is nothing magic about these tools--they are simply computer
- programs (like WordPerfect) that implement standard sets of rules,
- called protocols. (For example, using control-V for paste is a protocol
- on Macintosh computer systems.) No matter what computer you use (whether
- a Macintosh, a DOS-based computer, minicomputer, or mainframe computer)
- these tools should all work essentially the same way.
-
- 0.2.4.1. Electronic Mail (E-mail) Overview.
-
- E-mail is a tool that allows one user on the Internet to send a message
- to another user on the Internet. An e-mail message may contain text or
- pictures and sound encoded as text, but most often it is plain text. The
- various e-mail programs are the most widely used of the Internet tools,
- since the Internet is primarily used for communication between users.
- Users can be human or can be automated e-mail programs. Some of these
- automated programs can send your e-mail message to a group of
- individuals interested in the same type of information. By
- redistributing your e-mail message in this way, the automated e-mail
- program creates a virtual community--a discussion group. The listserv
- family of automated programs allows individuals to subscribe to various
- lists (or discussion groups). The listserv program handles all the
- administrative tasks (adding/deleting individuals from the subscription
- list; redistributing e-mail to all of the lists subscribers), leaving
- individual subscribers free to discuss substantive issues. Ill discuss
- some notable law-related listserv lists in Chapter 1.
-
- When people write a letter and send it from Maine to Finland via the
- United States Postal Services (USPS), they know that the to and from
- addresses must be written in a certain place, that mail may be returned
- if there is a problem, and that mail may be disposed of after sitting
- idly on the shelf of the post office (if, for example, both addresses
- are illegible). Internet e-mail works in much the same way. Some of the
- TCP/IP protocols deal with how to send, return, and dispose of e-mail.
-
- The advantages of Internet e-mail over USPS mail and telephone calls are
- numerous. Unlike with USPS mail, you do not have to find a stamp and
- drive to the nearest mailbox to send Internet e-mail. And unlike the
- telephone, Internet e-mail is never (well, almost never) busy. One
- winter, I planned a ski trip in Maine entirely by e-mail. I was able to
- make sure that each person got the same information, I could keep track
- of RSVPs, and I did not have to worry about making phone calls.
-
- 0.2.4.2. File Transfer Protocol (FTP) Overview.
-
- FTP is a tool that allows users on one computer (the local computer) to
- connect to another computer (the remote computer) for the limited
- purpose of copying files from (and sometimes to) the remote computer. A
- computer that is set up to accept incoming FTP requests from another
- computer is called an FTP server. Usually, the administrators of an FTP
- server will copy certain files to a public directory on the FTP server.
- In this way, information is made available to the Internet community. An
- FTP server is like a bulletin board. The owner of the FTP server can add
- and delete files from the public directory on the server server just as
- notices can be physically tacked to (and removed from) a bulletin board.
-
- 0.2.4.2.1. FTPMail (FTP via E-mail).
-
- Many resources are available via anonymous FTP. If you do not have
- access to FTP, but you do have access to e-mail, send a message with
- help in the body of the message to the following address.
-
- URL: mailto:ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com
-
- 0.2.4.2.2. FTPMail Example.
-
- For example, to get The Legal List via e-mail from the FTPMail service,
- send a message with the following text in the body of the message to the
- following address. The files will be e-mailed to you in a day or so.
-
- connect ftp.lcp.com
- ascii
- get /pub/LegalList/legallist.txt
- quit
-
- URL: mailto:ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com
-
- 0.2.4.3. Gopher Overview.
-
- Gopher is named for the mascot of the University of Minnesota, where it
- was developed. Its a menu-driven program, much like an ATM machine at a
- bank. The Gopher server--a computer set up to run the program--is set up
- with a main menu and a series of submenus. When you select a particular
- menu item, you can view documents, run other Internet programs, or
- connect to another Gopher server. (By allowing one Gopher server to
- connect to another, Gopher allows users to look at menus and submenus
- from Gopher servers all over the world--so once you have connected to
- one Gopher server, you can connect to them all.) When you connect to
- another Gopher server, the Gopher program on your local computer
- connects to the Gopher program on the remote computer just long enough
- to copy the menu from the remote computer. This allows many Internet
- users to look at a particular Gopher menu at a given time. In this way,
- using the Gopher program is much like signing a book out of the library
- one page at a time--rather than tying up the pages that others may be
- waiting for. A well-organized Gopher server can make finding information
- on the Internet much easier.
-
- Various client versions of Gopher software are available via anonymous
- FTP:
-
- URL: ftp://boombox.micro.umn.edu/pub/gopher/
-
- Using a local client is faster, but there are also a number of public
- Telnet login sites available:
-
- URL: telnet://gopher@consultant.micro.umn.edu (North America)
- URL: telnet://gopher@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (North America)
- URL: telnet://panda@panda.uiowa.edu (North America)
- URL: telnet://gopher@gopher.msu.edu (North America)
- URL: telnet://gopher@gopher.sunet.se (Europe)
- URL: telnet://info@info.anu.edu.au (Australia)
- URL: telnet://gopher@gopher.sunet.se (Sweden)
- URL: telnet://gopher@tolten.puc.cl (South America)
- URL: telnet://gopher@ecnet.ec (Ecuador)
- URL: telnet://gopher@gan.ncc.go.jp (Japan)
-
- For more information, contact the Gopher software developers:
-
- Internet Gopher Developers
- 100 Union St. SE #190
- Minneapolis, MN 55455
-
- URL: mailto:gopher@boombox.micro.umn.edu
-
- 0.2.4.3.1. GopherMail (Gopher via E-mail).
-
- Gopher is accessible via e-mail with GopherMail. To use GopherMail, send
- a message with help as the subject of the message to one of the
- following GopherMail servers (try to use a site near you).
-
- URL: mailto:gophermail@forestry.umn.edu (USA)
- URL: mailto:gophermail@calvin.edu (USA)
- URL: mailto:gopher@earn.net (France)
- URL: mailto:gophermail@ncc.go.jp (Japan)
- URL: mailto:gopher@dsv.su.se (Sweden)
- URL: mailto:gopher@earn.net (Europe)
-
- 0.2.4.3.2. VERONICA.
-
- VERONICA (Very Easy Rodent-Oriented Net-wide Index to Computerized
- Archives) is to GopherSpace what Archie, a program developed by the
- McGill School of Computer Science, is to the Internet's anonymous FTP
- archives. (For more information on Archie, see The Internet Resource
- Guide/Directory of Directories (see Section 0.1.3). VERONICA offers a
- keyword search of most of the Gopher-server menu titles in the world. To
- try VERONICA, select it from the Other Gophers menu on the University of
- Minnesota's Gopher server.
-
- 0.2.4.4. World-Wide Web (WWW) Overview.
-
- WWW is a distributed hypertext tool. If you have ever used HyperCard on
- the Macintosh or the help feature on Microsoft Windows, then you have
- used a hypertext system. More accurately, WWW (which was developed by
- CERN, the European Laboratory for Particle Physics) is a hyperMEDIA
- program because graphics and sound--in addition to text--can be
- displayed. A WWW server (a computer set up to run the WWW program) is
- like a deck of cards--you can skip from one location to another via
- links. Unlike Gopher, which presents you with a series of menu items,
- WWW presents the user with documents. Each document, like the menus in
- Gopher, can contain links, which often appear as bold or italicized
- text. When you select a particular link, you can view documents, run
- other Internet programs, or connect to another WWW server. The home page
- for a WWW server is analogous to the main menu for a Gopher server.
-
- To access the Web, you run a browser program that can read and retrieve
- documents. Mosaic is the most popular WWW browser program. The browsers
- can access information via/from FTP, Telnet, Usenet, Gopher, WAIS, and
- others.
-
- The following are some of the browsers accessible by Telnet (try to use
- sites near you):
-
- URL: telnet://www@ukanaix.cc.ukans.edu (US)
- URL: telnet://www@www.njit.edu (US)
- URL: telnet://info.cern.ch (Switzerland)
- URL: telnet://www@vms.huji.ac.il (Israel)
- URL: telnet://sun.uakom.cs (Slovakia)
- URL: telnet://info.funet.fi (Finland)
-
- 0.2.4.5. Wide Area Information Servers (WAIS) Overview.
-
- WAIS, the Wide Area Information Servers, is a networked full text
- information retrieval system developed by Thinking Machines, Apple
- Computer, and Dow Jones. WAIS currently uses TCP/IP to connect client
- applications to information servers. Client applications are able to
- retrieve text or multimedia documents stored on the servers. Client
- applications request documents using keywords. Servers search a full
- text index for the documents and return a list of documents containing
- the keyword. The client may then request the server to send a copy of
- any of the documents found. The WAIS software distribution is available
- via anonymous FTP:
-
- URL: ftp://think.com/wais/
-
- If you are in Europe try the following first:
-
- URL: ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/networking/services/wais/
-
- The easiest way to get started (if you do not have access to a WAIS
- client) is to try the WAIS at Thinking Machines:
-
- URL: telnet://wais@quake.think.com
-
- 0.2.4.5.1. WAISmail (WAIS via E-mail).
-
- If you do not have access to WAIS but you do have access to e-mail, you
- might want to try WAISmail, a WAIS via e-mail program. For more
- information on WAISmail, send a message with help as the subject of the
- message to the following address.
-
- URL: mailto:WAISmail@Think.COM
-
- With WAISmail, you can search WAIS sources and retrieve documents
- identified by your searches. Here is how the search and retrieve
- commands work:
-
- search [<source-name>|<source-name> <source-name> ...] {keywords...}
-
- Where <source-name> is a source name as found in the directory of
- servers (with or without the .src ending). If you use more than one
- source name and enclose them in quotes (as above), WAISmail will search
- both of the sources. If you try to search a nonexistent source, WAISmail
- will e-mail a list of sources to you. The following are some law-related
- WAIS sources that you may want to try:
-
- bit.listserv.pacs-l.src
- bush-speeches.src
- clinton-speechess.src
- computers-freedom-and-privacy.src
- cpsr.src
- directory-of-servers.src
- eff-talk.src
- ERIC-archive.src
- Eric-Digests.src
- eric-digests.src
- Health-Security-Act.src
- INFO.src
- Internet-user-glossary.src
- nafta.src
- NASA-directory-of-servers.src
- National-Performance-Review.src
- news.answers-faqs.src
- npr-library.src
- OSHA-Act.src
- OSHA-Field-Manual.src
- OSHA-Preamble.src
- OSHA-Standards.src
- OSHA-Tech-Manual.src
- patent.src
- rfcs.src
- SGML.src
- UNESCO-DARE-Social-Science-Institutes.src
- US-Budget-1993.src
- US-Congress-Phone-Fax.src
- US-State-Department-Travel-Advisories.src
- USHOUSE_congress_info.src
- Wests-Legal-Directory.src
- White-House-Papers.src
- world-factbook.src
- world-factbook93.src
- zipcodes.src
-
- retrieve <DOCID>
-
- Where <DOCID> is as returned by your search.
-
- 0.2.4.6. Bulletin Board System (BBS) Overview.
-
- There are approximately 50,000 BBSs nationwide, many of which are law-
- related. I have included only the essential information about these BBSs
- in Chapter 1, namely the phone number to call and a contact for more
- information. Most of the BBSs run 24 hours per day, many charge a fee,
- many are accessible at various baud rates. Your best bet is to read the
- introductory information carefully for each BBS.
-
- 0.2.5. Practical Uses of the Internet.
-
- The Internet offers a unique duality for the legal professional:
- communication and publication.
-
- 0.2.5.1. Communication via E-mail.
-
- Internet e-mail is nearly instantaneous, never (well, almost never)
- busy, and as easy as writing a letter. The recipient of an e-mail
- message can return (by cutting and pasting) portions of the senders
- original e-mail message with his/her response to provide the necessary
- context that is often lost in US mail or in phone messages.
-
- The power of the Internet as a means of communication cannot be
- understated. Last year, I sent about 10,000 e-mail messages, and I
- received about the same amount. This book was submitted via Internet e-
- mail. My clients, friends, and family are all on the Internet, and e-
- mail makes it easier for me to keep in touch with all of them.
-
- 0.2.5.2. Publication/Research via Internet Servers.
-
- As a means of publication, the Internet can be used for advertising,
- research, etc. Unlike Internet e-mail, which is primarily two-way
- communication, Internet publication (via FTP, Gopher, and WWW servers)
- is primarily one-way communication--from the publisher to the Internet
- community. The Internet publisher (which includes anybody who chooses to
- make information available on the Internet) can establish an FTP server,
- a Gopher server, and/or a World-Wide Web server. Organizations that are
- not yet prepared to respond to information requests via e-mail can still
- maintain a significant Internet presence by establishing such servers.
-
- On the Internet one can find primary law (cases, statutes, and
- treaties), secondary law (law review articles and the like), and
- tertiary law (discussion groups, unpublished manuscripts and the like).
- The key players in publishing law-related information on the Internet
- are law schools and government institutions. Since the Internet is a
- network of networks, with each network independently owned and operated,
- some of the information is easier to get than other. Ultimately, if the
- case, the statute, or the law review article that the Internet user
- seeks exists on the Internet, it exists as a file on a hard disk (or
- other storage medium) on a computer on a network somewhere on the
- Internet. It may exist in more that one location, and one locations
- version may be more up-to-date than anothers.
-
- 0.2.6. Who Else is on the Internet?
-
- Despite the growing popularity of the Internet as a means for
- communication, it has not yet achieved the same level of acceptance as
- the post office, the telephone, or the fax machine. While law firms
- regularly include postal addresses, phone numbers, and fax numbers on
- their business letters, and business cards, few include Internet
- addresses. Even in the academic community, where Internet access has
- been more common, the Internet hasn't risen to the level of the fax
- machine. Of the top 40 US law schools, Case Western Reserve University
- is the only school whose brochure specifically lists e-mail and WWW
- server addresses.
-
- 0.2.7. The Future of the Internet - Not Just for Scientists
- Anymore.
-
- Formerly used exclusively by government, military, and research users,
- the Internet is now being used by people in all lines of work. As more
- people get on the Internet, fewer people will be able to ignore the
- Internet. And as the Internet expands, there will be more legal issues
- (intellectual property, privacy, and First Amendment issues to name a
- few) to tackle.
-
- The Internet's ability to convey key information about a law firm, law
- school, or any organization is unique. As a means of communication, the
- Internet can supplement the phone, fax, and paper mail. As a means of
- publication, the Internet provides ways to research and advertise--as
- well as to shop and have fun. In my opinion, letterhead, fax leaders,
- business cards, and e-mail signatures--at least those for organizations-
- -should all contain US Postal Service addresses, phone numbers, fax
- numbers, and Internet addresses. Internet addresses can be either e-mail
- addresses (for two-way communication) or Gopher and WWW server addresses
- (for one-way publication). Law firms should be prepared to use all of
- the generally accepted means of communication. Your clients may want to
- have options. Like the fax machine, the Internet is here to stay.
-
- --
- |||| Erik J. Heels, Lawyers Cooperative Publishing heels@lcp.com
- |||| c/o Counterpoint Publishing http://www.lcp.com
- |||| 84 Sherman St. Fax: (617) 547-9064
- |||| Cambridge, MA 02140 Phone: 1-800-998-4515 x3112
-