LLRXBuzz - April 1, 2002
By Tara Calishain, Published on April 1, 2002
The Latest on
Legal Research
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International Law Resource Guide
The American Society of International Law has its ASIL Guide to Electronic
Resources for International Law posted online at
http://www.asil.org/resource/Home.htm. According to the Introduction,
there are about 2,000 links in the chapters on human rights, treaties,
environmental law, criminal law and more. And when I say "chapters,"
that's just what I mean.
This site isn't just a portal, there is more to it than a list of links.
In each chapter, the author elaborates on research strategies in that
particular arena of international law, from general to specialized
resources. Web links have explanations on their content and how they can
benefit the researcher. Every six months, each chapter is revised and
updated to assure timely accuracy of its information.
If you find the Web version of the site useful, it's also available in a
book version for $35. Worth a look.
H-Law
The National Endowment for the Humanities and Michigan State University
sponsors a mailing list focusing on constitutional and legal history.
Subscription is open to anyone from advanced student to professional,
including teachers and others interested in the serious study of
constitutional and legal history. You can join by sending an e-mail to
listserv@H-NET.MSU.EDU and putting subscribe h-law in the message field.
If you don't want to subscribe via e-mail, you can sign up via the Web at
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~law/.
This page also contains recent messages from the list, monthly archives
back to June 1993, reviews, and a set of links of
interest to legal and constitutional historians.
Goldie Oldies
OldVersion, at
http://www.oldversion.com/, offers downloadable installation files of
older software programs that have been superceded by more current
versions. Click on any of the listed programs ranging from Ad-aware to
ZoneAlarm and including Adobe Acrobat, Eudora, WinZip, and others.
Each program is described with its latest version and a link to its Web
site, then all available earlier versions are listed. Note that the older
version links are .exe files so they will start downloading as soon as you
open them.
Note that these are not old versions of paid programs; instead these are
older versions of free programs. The Eudora page, for example, has Eudora
Light 1.5, 3.0.1, and 3.0.6. Extremely handy if you have an older computer
that won't run the latest software or browser incompatibility with newer
software.
Practical Privacy Tools
An entire box of privacy tools is online at
http://www.epic.org/privacy/tools.html The Electronic Privacy
Information Center starts this site with a featured tool, which currently
offers a way of analyzing the privacy of the your Internet connection. (It
checks for cookies, your browser type, whether your browser is sending a
referral URL, what plug-ins you have installed, whether you've got
JavaScript, Java, and VBScript running, etc.)
Additional tools are sorted under categories headings like Snoop Proof
Email, HTML Filters and Cookie Busters. The section on Email and File
Privacy provides a link to MIT's Distribution Center for PGP (that's
Pretty Good Privacy). PGP enables the user to encrypt messages so they
cannot be
read by someone else on the network. MIT offers various versions of PGP
freeware to "U.S. citizens in the United States, or to Canadian citizens
in Canada."
There are also more pedestrian privacy tools here, like firewalls and a
random password generator. I would like to see more resource annotation
here, but there's plenty to see, especially for the beginner to privacy.
Worth a look.
The Nevada Index
If you like law, politics, Nevada, and lots of bright colors on your Web
pages, you're gonna like The Nevada Index at
http://www.nevadaindex.com/.
The first part of the front page is divided into two parts. The left side
of the side has links to Nevada legal resources. Categories include law
and legal resources, but also local media and Los Vegas history. (Skip the
search
engines page, though -- it's still got listings for Excite, Magellan, and
Webcrawler.)
The right side of the page has links to political information -- state and
local links, public complaints, frequently used government services, and
essays about Las Vegas. Below that you'll find search forms for several
search services: the Nevada Index itself, Nevada Revised Statutes, Google,
etc.
There's plenty to see at this site and I love the attitude that recommends
Opera and Pegasus. The site does look a little aged (the award notations
on the front page are from 1998!) but apparently the front page was last
updated in
February 2002 and there are essays/articles from 2001 and 2002. Worth a
look.
Oxford Reference is rolling out the barrel
of research!
Get more information in the ResearchBuzz article at
http://www.researchbuzz.com/articles/2002/oxfordreference0320.htm.
Metasearch Engine Focuses on UK Search
Engines
AllSearchEngines (http://www.allsearchengines.co.uk)
has started a metasearch engine that offers results from six UK-focused
search engines -- Overture UK, Yahoo UK, Mirago UK, AltaVista UK and MSN
UK.
You have the option of waiting between 2 and 25 seconds for your search
results, and it looks like you get 100 search results (ten pages of ten.)
You can also search for MP3s (three UK sources) and images (two UK
sources.) Fast results. Worth a look.
