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BLOODY SUNDAY SYSTEM WINS SCL AWARD
The winners, who received the award from David Lock MP, the junior minister at the Lord Chancellor's Department, were the consortium responsible for putting together the courtroom presentation and litigation support technology backing Lord Saville's inquiry into the 1972 Bloody Sunday shootings in Londonderry, Northern Ireland. The winning consortium, which was headed by ICL, included contributions by Ulster IT consultancy NICLR as well as two well-known legal market players: the OyezStraker subsidiary Legal Technologies and the Livenote system from Smith Bernal.
But what exactly was does the winning entry do? Cutting through all the jargon, the consortium put together an integrated package of technologies to support the inquiry in the full range of its activities. So, along with display systems for handling scanned in images of documents and video evidence, there are also real time transcription and database retrieval systems.
However the undoubted star of the show, which makes the Bloody Sunday enquiry IT infrastructure really stand out from every other courtroom evidence presentation system in use in the UK today is a 360 degree 3D virtual reality recreation of 1972 Londonderry.
Thus, despite the fact the city has radically changed over the past 30 years since the shootings took place, by using a touch screen panel, witnesses at the inquiry can pull up images to illustrate their testimony. Not least it means that when someone says "I stood there, I could see a gunman on that roof," the inquiry can follow his eyeline to see if it was physically possible to see anyone from that vantage point - or whether the passage time had not only altered the landscape but also dimmed recollections?
So was the project worth it? Lord Saville has already said he believes the technology has made the proceedings substantially quicker. And, it was no surprise to hear David Lock MP add his view that this use of technology was entirely in keeping with the Lord Chancellor's Department's current strategy of investing in technology to modernise the justice system. But, there is also another potential benefit of this system, in the context of the Londonderry scenario, namely the 3D graphics elements provides an impartial aid to witnesses - as distinct from being just one side's reconstruction of events. A case of justice must not only be done but virtually seen to be done.
In recognition of the fact the awards jury are frequently looking at entirely different products - how can you judge whether an accounts system is better than an online training system or even a courtroom presentation system - the SCL scheme also highlights the immediate runners-up for the awards. This year there were four: Perceptive Technology's Mentor knowledge management system, the IRIS XML-based knowledge management system from Interface Software, the 2Ends online CPD system and the BAMM welfare benefits system from Ferret Information Systems.
SUSSKIND'S NEW BOOK OUT
COLORADO GETS STATEWIDE E-FILING
By coincidence the Judicial Conference of the United States, which makes policy guidelines for the federal judiciary, has just announced that it is to investigate the privacy issues associated with e-filing, The move stems from concerns the e-filing will make it far easier for unscrupulous third parties to access confidential information that was previously effectively buried in bundles of documents stored in a courthouse basement.
FROM DOTCOM TO DOT GONE
Meanwhile Yazam, the Israeli venture capitalist fund that owns the e-business networking group First Tuesday, has refused an offer of just under $500,000 put forward by members wanting to take control. The group First Tuesday is reported to be up for sale at a price of just £2million - Yazam is rumoured to have paid £33million for it last year.
US ENDS DOUBLECLICK PRIVACY PROBE
EXPERIAN MOVES INTO PERMISSION BASED EMAIL MARKETING
MICROSOFT SETTLES JAVA SUIT WITH SUN
FIGHTING ECONOMY CLASS SYNDROME
He has set up a specific DVT section on his CanIClaim.com accident and injury compensation web site, where he is attempting to pull together all the latest information on DVT from victims, lawyers and the medical profession from around the world. The site invites all those who are involved in this area to share their knowledge via the web with others so that a clearer picture can be obtained of the number of cases that have occurred, the research that has already been done and is ongoing, and whether there is any genuine liability on the part of the airlines. It is believed that DVT may be caused by long periods of inactivity during flights particularly when sitting in cramped conditions. There is also some evidence to show that the air pressure in an aeroplane may be a contributory factor.
UK GOVERNMENT ADOPTION THREAT SHOWS WEB IGNORANCE
Under UK law only local authority social service departments and approved voluntary adoption agencies are allowed to advertise children for adoption. In an echo of the French Yahoo! case, the ISPA has had to explain to the government that while its members are always willing to remove unlawful material from their own servers, they have no control over overseas web sites and are powerless to stop their users from accessing such sites.
MAFIABOY ADMITS TO HACKING
LAWASSURE LAUNCHES
There are two versions of the service and both are based on an annual subscription: consumers pay £99 pa (plus VAT) while small businesses pay £399 (plus VAT). There are also plans to sell the LawAssure scheme through an a number of "affinity" groups and marketing affiliates, such as credit card companies and property developers. Epoch are also launching a similar service in the United States in association with the legal expenses insurer ARAG and the legal portal MyLawyer.com.
As with all voluntary, optional-extra "insurance type" subscription deals the user has to take a punt on whether the cost of the premium is great than the risk of something going wrong. But for a small business it is worth noting that you cannot buy very much conventional legal advice from even a High Street law firm for just £400. In fact figures produced by the Institute of Chartered Accountants suggest that a business employing up to 50 staff can expect to pay £8000 a year on just routine legal advice and compliance with red tape.
LawAssure say their scheme fits in with both with the Lord Chancellor's Department's recent civil justice consultation paper, which hope to encourage small claims to be made over the internet, and the LCD's 'civil.justice 1998 ' position paper, which states: "The implications for the business of general legal practitioners are especially far-reaching if their clients or customers currently question or doubt value being delivered or added by the traditional legal advisory service. Into this category will fall, for example, the drafting of a wide range of standard contracts and agreements. Traditional legal service will be displaced by online document assembly."
According to Epoch's founder Richard Cohen: "Historically, cost has prevented many individuals and businesses from protecting themselves. But now the availability of unlimited legal information and accompanying 'intelligent' legal documents means that users have a ready solution to deal with their everyday contractual and regulatory affairs. The combination of cutting-edge technology to deliver an affordable legal service, along with the human touch of personal advice poses a real challenge for the high street solicitor".
LEGAL TECHNOLOGY NEWS.COM - FROM THE PUBLISHERS OF LEGAL TECHNOLOGY INSIDER. NEXT ISSUE 01.02.2001
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