It’s been an unusually exciting month in the legal tech world. Several lawyers have been charged with (and cleared of) upsetting electronic crimes. An Am Law 100 firm got sued for allegedly screwing up e-discovery. I haven’t even had the time or need to write the same vague jibber-jabber about Google+ that everyone else on the Internet has already written.
This week, we’ve got more high-profile tech arrests, involving the members of an international hacker club who happen to be supporters of everyone’s favorite Australian albino.
For deets on the legal consequences of crashing PayPal’s website, read on….
Continue reading “FBI Rolls Out the Hacker Paddywagon in Nationwide Raid”




New York Lawmakers Want to Ban Anonymous Commenting. I Wish I Were Kidding.
By Christopher Danzigridiculousinteresting enough to merit a couple hundred words. You do this long enough, and you wind up getting picky pretty quickly. So, last night, when I clicked over to Wired, it was surprising in and of itself that when I saw the following story I literally stared at the screen, slack jawed, for close to a minute.That’s how ridiculous this proposed legislation coming out of New York is. The only thing I can say is that if this bill somehow managed to become law, the Above the Law commentariat would not be happy at all…
Tags: 1st Amendment, anon, Anonymity, Anonymous Commenting, Anonymous Feedback, Bad Ideas, Blog Wars, Blogging, Cyberbullying, Cyberlaw, Eugene Volokh, First Amendment, Free Speech, Jim Conte, Media and Journalism, New York, New York State, Online anonymity, Rank Stupidity, Ridiculousness, Technology, Thomas O'Mara, Tom O'Mara