Diane Levin hosted this week’s Blawg Review #181 at Mediation Channel — click here to read it. As you would expect from one of Ed.’s Blawg Review Sherpas, the Review is both well-written and exhaustive. Levin’s focus was International Conflict Resolution Day. And when Ed. realized that he had created an international incident by not acknowledging Canadian Thanksgiving, Levin even updated the Review with some Canadian content. By the way, happy Thanksgiving to the Blog’s Canadian friends and readers.
Among other posts, Levin highlighted the October Carnival of Trust, hosted by its founder Charles Green at Trust Matters — click here to read it. Green links to a post at Without Wax about what to do when your trust in someone begins slipping away — click here to read it. The blog, and the post, appear to be focused more on family and friend relationships. But the issue and the proposed resolution translate to the legal realm because trust is paramount in the law just as it is with family and friends — with courts, with opposing counsel, with clients and with colleagues. Without Wax suggests that instead of pulling back when trust is disappearing, you engage that person and the problem. Silence rarely fixes trust. You are far better off facing the issue and trying to fix the problem so that it does not recur, whether it is a misunderstanding or an actual breach of trust.
Finally, Larry Lessig’s enthralling Wall Street Journal op-ed piece about the current state of copyright law and whether it fits with modern life did not make the Review (probably because it was not a blog post), but it is worth a read — click here for Lessig’s op-ed. Or you could skip right to Victoria Pynchon’s excellent analysis at the IP ADR Blog — click here to read Pynchon’s post.
[UPDATE]: Lessig makes clear at his Lessig 2.0 blog that despite the title the WSJ gave his op-ed — A Defense of Piracy — he does not support piracy. Lessig is proposing conforming copyright law to what he sees as the realities of modern living.

Continue Reading Blawg Review #181 — ADR & Canadian Thanksgiving

The Blawg Reviews are not belated, just my post about them. Last week’s Blawg Review #179 is up at Securing Innovation — click here to read it. It is an ode to the ballpoint pen on its seventieth anniversary. It was a transformative invention, dispersing the power of the pen much more broadly across societies. I am a rollerball guy, but it is still a great review. And as would be expected from an IP-focused blog, there is a heavy dose of IP.
This week’s Blawg Review #180 is up at Law Pundit — click here to read it. Law Pundit focuses on German-American Day with exhaustive information about German-Americans and Oktoberfest. After completing Review #179, Securing Innovation also plays a role in #180 because of its highlight of an article suggesting that the US nonpracticing entity patent litigation strategy has found its way to Germany and Europe generally — click here for Phillipa Maister’s IP Law & Business article discussing NPE’s in Europe.
Next week’s Blawg Reivew #181 by the Mediation Channel.

Continue Reading Belated Blawg Reviews

Blawg Review #178 is up at Peter Black’s Freedom to Differ — click here to read it. Black also cross-posted each link in this week’s Review on Twitter. I admit that I have not grasped the full power of Twitter, but I am working on it. And I do grasp the power of Black’s Review. It is well done and contains lots of interesting links.

Continue Reading Blawg Review #178

Blawg Review #177 is up at Small Business Trends — click here to read it. Small Business Trends is a business blog and, so focuses its review on legal angles on business issues. The Review covers a number of intellectual property issues, including UsefulArt’s post about India’s first trademark on a sound. There is also considerable coverage of a hot legal blog topic, the use of Twitter by lawyers and businesses for marketing.

Continue Reading Blawg Review #177 — Back to Business

Blawg Review #176 is hosted by Legal Literacy — click here for the Review — on the United Nations’ International Literacy Day. Literacy is worthy of far more than a single day of focus, and it turns out that the United Nations agrees. Apparently, we are halfway through the Literacy Decade (running from 2003 until 2012).
Legal Literacy’s Review is full of great content, including some interesting IP-related topics. Thomas Colson at Securing Innovations (another LexBlog site) has a very interesting post (click here) on a new series of commercials by the PTO and Invent Now, among others, aimed at encouraging 8 – 11 year old boys and girls to invent. Colson is concerned that the commercials feed gender stereotypes and links to A Girl Named Pants his series of children’s books that motivate young girls to overcome gender stereotypes.
I can see the stereotype concerns to a degree, but the ads that I found were pretty powerful and funny. Click here for the LA Times article Colson links to containing a video of one add — I would love to add a suction bike to my bike collection. And to the extent that there is stereotyping, I think it is far outweighed by the potential good of the program. Having said that, I am impressed by Colson’s books and vision. When my daughter is old enough, I will be reading to her about the adventures of Pants.

Continue Reading Blawg Review #176 — Fighting for Literacy

Blawg Review #175 is up at Jamie Spencer’s Austin DWI Lawyer (another LexBlog site) — click here to read the Review. Fitting with Ed.’s sense of humor, a DWI lawyer was chosen to host the Labor Day Review, instead of a more traditional pick, like a labor lawyer. Of course, there are lots of interesting DWI posts, and a few good IP links. Spencer links to Victoria Pynchon’s post at the IP ADR Blog about the arrest of a blogger who posted new Guns N’ Roses tracks before the group released its new album — click here to read it. In a “teeny tiny” act of civil disobedience, Pynchon posted the entire text of the LA Times story on the arrest. While I will admit to one or two acts of civil disobedience in my day, today you are just getting a link to the Chicago Tribune’s story by Michelle Quinn and Swati Pandey on the arrest and the increasing use of criminal copyright infringement prosecutions — click here.
September’s Carnival of Trust is up at Compensation Force — click here for the Carnival. There are no specific legal or IP posts this month, but lots of great stuff on building and maintaining relationships with trust.

Continue Reading Blawg Review & the September Carnival of Trust

Blawg Review #174 is available at D. Todd Smith’s Texas Appellate Law Blog — click here to read it. Smith boldly went without a theme, but it is a great Review, even without a theme. Smith picks up on my coverage of the Seventh Circuit’s recent decision affirming the Northern District’s holding that the NFL is a single entity for IP licensing purposes, as well as related coverage at Sports Law Blog and Blawgletter.

Continue Reading Blawg Review #174

Last week’s Olympic edition Blawg Review focused on the medals. Building on that, this week I discuss the elements of a world record swim. If you were watching last week, instead of blogging, you saw 20 of them in the Olympic pool; seven by Mr. Phelps.
Practice
Nothing is more critical than preparation. A big part of preparation is tightening your stroke and cutting out unnecessary motion. Reese Morrison, at the Law Department Management blog, discusses blunt suggestions for trimming legal bills.
Endless hours in the pool alone are not enough, you need a good coach. Business development coach Cordell Parvin provides an excellent three part series at his Law Consulting Blog – one, two, and three – on persistence, an important element of any Olympic training program. In an Olympic caliber display of persistence, Drug & Device Law had an exhaustive post discussing and classifying each medical device preemption case since the landmark Supreme Court decision in Riegel v. Medtronic, Inc., 128 S. Ct. 999 (2008).
You also need a support network to help you get through all of the pool time. Bruce Allen, at Marketing Catalyst, teaches us how to avoid the cocktail conversation you cannot escape from at a networking event. At Copyblogger, John Morrow explains that content is no longer king in the blogosphere, you need friends. And he teaches you how to get them. At BlawgIT, Brett Trout – who is a fighter, not a swimmer – has an interesting post about how to work together as a community to thwart webjackings (the hijacking of a website). And Mediation Channel’s Diane Levin discusses the social side of blogging, and reading blogs.
Of course, if you do not have time to practice you will never set the record. So, you need a job, or at least some cash. On that note, Harmful Error posts the great news that loan forgiveness programs were expanded this week for legal aid lawyers, state prosecutors and public defenders.
The Suit
The clothes make the man (or the woman). This year the go-to duds were Speedo’s LZR suits. Patent Librarian Michael White tells us that, no surprise, Speedo patented the LZR. IPKat expands on swimming patents, providing a broader view of Olympics-related patents.
Genes
As a guy who swam for a lot of years and practiced hard throughout, I can tell you not everyone has what it takes to set world records. The closest I came was getting beat by an Olympian and world record holder. Of course, you might be less impressed by my loss if you knew that at the time his Olympic medals were four or five decades old, and I was 19. At Idealawg, Stephanie West Allen discusses the traits that make entrepreneurs entrepreneurial.
Mental Focus
One of the big stories on Phelps this week was how he thinks of nothing but not losing during a race. At Litigation & Trial, Maxwell Kennerly tells us that you have to know when you are sweating the details more than your client would want by over emphasizing proof-reading. Of course, even Kennerly agrees that some details matter.
Knowing the Rules
You have to know the rules. Turn wrong or break the rules for your stroke and beating a record by ten seconds will not matter. At the Legal Juice, John Mesirow reports that kids at the Lake County Florida library are allowed to rent R-rated movies because they believe it is an unconstitutional delegation of authority for the Motion Picture Association of America’s guidelines for determining obscenity. I am sure kids from all over that area are flocking to the Lake County library because the rules are on their side, at least for now.
Filewrapper reports on a Federal Circuit decision holding that copyright infringement, and not just breach of contract, when the terms of an open source license governing the copyrighted material are breached. For more on this major decision in the IP world, check out: BLT; Law Pundit; and Patently-O.
Seattle Trademark Lawyer Mike Graham shows the consequences of not following the rules using two Western District of Washington opinions.
Ethan Lieb, guest blogging at Freakonomics, argues that we need to change the rules requiring unanimous juries. And the WSJ Law Blog discusses a judge and a juror who clashed over jury nullification.
The Start
A bad start is hard to recover from, especially when you are chasing the fastest time ever. Evan Schaeffer shows how to open well at trial at the Illinois Trial Practice Weblog, and he links to Trial Theatre’s opening statement quiz.
Turns
Coming off the wall in a turn is the fastest a swimmer goes during a race. So, you need good turns. IntLawGrrls discuss how to turn around the conflict between Georgia and Russia (sorry the turns section was tough).
Legal Literacy discusses Whole Foods’ turned around (or recalled) beef and looks behind the scenes at how it happened and Whole Foods’ impressively quick response.
The Finish
Do you do an extra stroke or do you glide in hard? Always a tough question, but the .01 seconds the decision costs you can mean the race and the record.
At his E.D. Texas Weblog, Michael Smith reports that while the E.D. Texas started out as a rocket docket, particularly for patents, it has now slowed down and let many other districts catch it with a time to trial of 24 – 30 months.
The Law and Magic Blog reminds us that we cannot always win, and that trying to rig the system to guarantee wins – he is talking about the stock market, but it holds true for the pool – is dangerous work.
At the IP ADR Blog, Victoria Pynchon praises several Perkins Coie attorneys who went the distance for their pro bono clients at Gitmo and earned the clients’ respect for providing them an able defense.
** Images provided via a Creative Commons license by A. Dawson or Andre from Flicker. **
Next week’s Blawg Review will be at fellow LexBlog site, the Texas Appellate Law Blog.
Blawg Review has information about next week’s host, and instructions on how to get your blawg posts reviewed in upcoming issues.

Continue Reading Blawg Review #173

This week’s Blawg Review is available — click here to read it — at the Ohio Employer’s Law Blog written by the lawyers at Kohrman, Jackson & Krantz. The Blawg Review’s Olympic edition awards gold medals in two categories of blog posts: 1) employment law; and 2) non-employment law. It is worth your time, if you can pull yourself away from Michael Phelps’s second run at Mark Spitz’ record eight gold medals in a single Olympics. But after last night’s amazing finish in the 4 X 100 M relay, I would not suggest you stay away too long.

Continue Reading Blawg Review #172, the Gold Medal Edition