
A Big Week For Not Knowing The Law
From Elon Musk's deposition to law school protests, a lot of folks forgot to look up the actual law this week.
From Elon Musk's deposition to law school protests, a lot of folks forgot to look up the actual law this week.
Law schools that refused to cooperate with U.S. News saw their peer surveys ignored. It's the right call.
"Decrypting Crypto" is a go-to guide for understanding the technology and tools underlying Web3 and issues raised in the context of specific legal practice areas.
Much to ASS Law's chagrin, 'our professors get cited in more law reviews,' isn't how most people evaluate law schools.
Joe and Chris talk about law school, layoffs, and basic decency.
* The new US News rankings are out for everyone to complain about and the final tally of boycotting law schools rests at 63. Congratulations... the rankings make even less sense now than before because of you! [Law.com] * On that note, the new US News rankings also devalued faculty expertise... right when institutions in GOP-led states are attacking tenure. Great job! [Chronicle of Higher Education] * First Circuit tosses Varsity Blues conviction, which is great news for admissions officers looking to earn some on the side. [Law360] * Dianne Feinstein returns to the Senate allowing the Judiciary Committee to sort of function again. And all it cost is some self-imposed elder abuse. [Bloomberg Law News] * Fani Willis drops objection to Kimberly Debrow now that the lawyer has shed a couple more clients. Honestly unsure what's worse: the prosecutor trying to get you kicked off the case or the prosecutor then deciding, "you know what... we're happy to have you represent the defendants." [NY Times] * Antitrust is broken and willing prosecutors aren't enough to fix it because corporate stooge judges make taking a case to trial poses too much risk. And Democratic nominees have been largely to blame. [American Prospect] * University of Maryland forced to end its streaming service after being reminded that it doesn't own its streaming rights. This is what happens when you try to come out of your shell. [Washington Post]
Four insights and misunderstandings to help demystify GenAI for legal professionals.
Big changes in the T14, along with some of the largest rankings tumbles and gains.
Can the T14 rankings get even more absurd? You betcha.
This won't help U.S. News to recover from its bad reputation.
What does this mean? When will the U.S. News rankings be released?
A culture of innovation with strategic AI like Lexis+ AI is revolutionizing law firms by boosting efficiency and deepening client relationships.
There are so many inaccuracies that U.S. News couldn't even give a future publication date.
Uh-oh! The latest version of the rankings are apparently riddled with errors.
What could possibly be the hold up here?
Which law schools are new to (and excluded from) the T14 in this version of the rankings?
Which law schools are new to (and excluded from) the T14 in this version of the rankings?