LLRXBuzz - December 24, 2001
By Tara Calishain, Published on December 24, 2001
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eLexPortal
eLexPortal.com (http://www.elexportal.com/)
is a source for information about European eCommerce. Its Regulatory
Enquiry Service provides information about how eCommerce regulatory issues
relate to business processes. It focuses on background rationale,
legislation status and implementation guidelines. It also covers the
rights and obligations of each Member State.
The site is divided into several sections: regulatory enquiries, news and
information (remember the dates here are in European format, so 1/12/2001
isn't January 12, but December 1), Online Community, eLearning (there
are spaces for both links to relevant online tutorials and tutorials
hosted by this site, but there don't appear to be any tutorials hosted by
this site yet), and Help & Support.
Services will be free from the site in 2002, but registration will be
required for interactive servicessuch as Directory Services and an
Interactive Forum with eLexPortal experts. Membership services will also
include interest-specific e-mail alerts. Future plans include a charge for
services in 2003.
Licensee Lookup in Montana
Montana's Website is featuring a new licensee lookup service you might be
interested in. You can access it from the state's home page at
http://www.discoveringmontana.com/. The direct URL is
http://app.discoveringmontana.com/bsdinq/.
You can search this database in two ways. Simply enter the license number
and select from the drop-down list of licensing boards (from Alternative
Health Care to Veterinary Medicine.) The other option requires the
licensee last name and type of license with a first name and city, county
or zip code.
Search results include name, city, state, profession, license type,
specialty (if any), license number, status, and expiration date. The name
is hyperlinked.
Click on it and you'll get a little additional information, including the
original issue date. There's a space for disciplinary information, but
that feature doesn't appear to be active.
text-e
text-e, at
http://www.text-e.org/index.cfm?switchLang=Eng&, is a virtual
symposium exploring the Internet's effect on reading and writing along
with the distribution of knowledge. This symposium runs from October 2001
through March 2002, and is in three languages: English, French and
Italian. The list of featured speakers is on the homepage.
Of course, registration is required to participate in the discussions.
Click on Participants to see who text-e invited to discuss the topics.
Additional
information about the participants is available by clicking on each name.
There are some interesting topics covered here such as What the
Internet tells us about the Real Nature of the Book and The New
Architecture of Information. A new subject is covered every two weeks, and
continues through the holidays. Latecomers can view earlier discussions.
The symposium also offers each speaker's text in downloadable format.
Consumer Privacy Guide
Everyone can use a lesson on Consumer Web Law and this site at
http://www.consumerprivacyguide.org/ is just the place to get it.
Consumer Privacy Guide offers how-to guides for reading privacy policies
and financial
services information. It even provides privacy-smart information for kids.
This site features a section on things to do to protect your privacy while
using the Internet. It gives instructions for clearing a computer's memory
and how
to be certain an online form is secure. It offers advice on entering
contests, what to do with cookies, how to encrypt your email and more.
Additional options on this site includes Frequently Asked Questions and an
extensive list of addition resources. There's a glossary of related terms
and a
section on how your privacy is protected under the law. A very informative
site!
Justice Statistics
The U.S. Department of Justice has a page of crime and justice statistics
at
http://149.101.22.40/dataonline/. Types of information that can
be searched on this site include crime trends, homicide trends and law
enforcement statistics. Search tables include state- by-state or national
trends, trends in one variable and a single year of data. You can also
elect to receive numbers reported from local agencies or from states.
Search results are in an Excel spreadsheet that is downloadable onto your
desktop.
Daypop Now Indexing RSS Headlines from
NewsIsFree
Daypop (http://www.daypop.com) now
indexes headlines from NewsIsFree. To search headlines only, put your
query in the box and choose "headlines" from the drop-down list to the
right. You can get more news on this implementation at
http://www.danchan.com/weblog/daypop/6224. (And it leads me to a
question -- NewsIsFree and Weblogs.com both produce Changes.xml files.
Does anybody else? And are any other sites besides Daypop and a few other
ones using them?)
