Consuming Social Media with Search and Hootsuite

Posted in Business Information, News, Research Management, Social media, Twitter | Tagged , ,

One high volume and high maintenance information area is social media.  Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ all generate huge streams of information that have the potential for containing useful nuggets.  What do you do if you want to dig out these valuable pieces without participating in social media?

You will need to create an account but can immediately lock it against followers or friends. Try a Twitter account first because it has fewest potential missteps in securing your account.  One you have your Twitter account in hand, create another account at Hootsuite.com.  Hootsuite provides a different way of looking at activity on Twitter and other social networks.  More importantly, it has some nice features for monitoring content by keyword or Twitter username.  You can use Hootsuite to monitor content on LinkedIn, WordPress.com blogs, and Facebook, among others, but you need your own account for each of those services.

Once in Hootsuite, you have a number of options for managing your information.  It assumes you want to be social, so your Twitter feeds will automatically be displayed, even though they are empty.  You can delete each of these to clear your window, ready for having searches there instead.  You want to add a stream and the following screen will appear:

Adding a search stream in Hootsuite for Twitter messages with "premises liability" in them

Adding a search stream in Hootsuite for Twitter messages with "premises liability" in them

Hootsuite recently purchased Twapperkeeper (named with a nod towards Mead’s Trapper Keeper), a service that archived Twitter messages.  You can archive a stream based on a single keyword in Hootsuite now, or you can use the original three keyword search.  As you create each new stream, it will appear in the window.

The goal here is to rely on the search mechanism rather than the networking connections to capture information as it flows by.  Since networking requires you to make or receive connections from others, search allows you to monitor without interacting with others.  For example, if you were monitoring a particular company or topic, you can set up a search to focus on it without becoming a Facebook friend or Twitter follower of that company and explicitly showing your interest.

Once you have created a number of streams, you may find that they extend off the screen.  Hootsuite supports tabbed pages, so you can aggregate streams on a given topic (practice area specific, for example, or a corporation or industry) so that you can quickly see what is going on in any given stream without scrolling too far left or right.

Lurking on Twitter or Facebook in this way may seem rather anti-social networking but social media remains a challenge for legal professionals.  Using search to mine the information allows you to consume information that is being shared openly without having to worry about confidentiality, privacy, or disclosure of representation breaches.

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Free Westlaw News App Has Legal Content

Posted in Apps, Business Information, iPad, iPhone, News, U.S., Westlaw | Tagged , , ,

The major legal publishers do not seem to have much vision when it comes to their legal research apps (here and here) but there are some gems in their news tools.  The free Thomson Reuters News Pro tool is mostly just press releases and I didn’t think it is particularly helpful, although it was nice to see an app that had been developed for Android as well as for the Apple products.

One iPhone only app that is legal specific (and not listed on the list of Westlaw-related apps and mobile sites on the Westlaw Web site, above) is the Westlaw News and Insight app for iPhone and iPad, powered by Reuters Legal.  It has national (US) legal news, bankruptcy news, and California and securities litigation updates.  It is full content, without needing a password, and is a great resource if you practice in the areas covered.  The national news section actually covers many practice areas, so there is likely to be some relevant content for just about any lawyer.

Westlaw US News and Insights:  National Legal Newsq

Westlaw US News and Insights: National Legal News

Some of the content has hyperlinks, outside the app and to public Web sites.  Funnily enough, Westlaw hasn’t bothered to include links to its own content, like a case mentioned in the text.  This would seem to be an obvious opportunity to get people to access content within their proprietary environment.

Case Citation in Westlaw News and Insights App Not Hyperlinked

Case Citation in Westlaw News and Insights App Not Hyperlinked

The app is not limited to news, however, and I was impressed by their inclusion of court documents.  These are provided as full text, scanned PDFs so that you can get directly to the source after reading about a case.

Westlaw News and Insight Case Document PDF with Magnifying Glass

Westlaw News and Insight Case Document PDF with Magnifying Glass

All in all, a good app to add to your Apple portable device and see if it becomes a part of your research toolkit.  It takes advantage of browsing, which is a nice change to the rather limited search on other legal research apps.

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Mobile Lawyers Accessmylibrary for Free Business Research

Posted in Android, Business Information, Canada, Cengage Gale, iPad, Mobile, News, U.S. | Tagged , , ,

Libraries appear to be fighting (losing) battles over funding, prestige, perceptions of usefulness around the globe.  One of the things that many North American public library systems and consortia have been doing is licensing electronic databases for your use.  They skew heavily towards primary and secondary school users and that type of research.  But there are business information databases and directories that can be helpful to any legal researcher.  Greg Lambert and Ann Lee Gibson mention these databases in a recent American Bar Association Law Practice magazine piece.

Information Today reports that Cengage Learning’s Gale Group has released an app for iPad and Android devices that makes using their Accessmylibrary resource easier than ever and takes you into fee-based resources normally only accessible from your library’s site.  You can access some information by going to Accessmylibrary.com and entering information about your local public library.

The apps use geolocation to determine which library’s resources are available to you, looking in a 10 mile radius.  Open up the app while you are on the move and you’ll see that the library – and subscribed databases – has changed.  It’s great marketing for the libraries, except that you never have to enter one to get access to this information.

Unlike my local public library, where I have to enter my library card number, the app does not require any additional authentication.  In at least one of the libraries that I can see during the day, I can get access to databases like Legaltrac, the National Newspaper Index, and the CPI.Q Canadian Periodicals database.

Grab the app and keep it in mind when you’re looking for a quick answer or secondary information relating to your legal issue.  Open it up on your commute and see if you have resources available that are different from your local library.  It’s a great resource for information that might not be found in your typical legal research subscription.

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Litigators Can Focus Social Media Search

Posted in Business Information, Global, Google, News, Social media, Twitter | Tagged ,

Google has announced some updates to their realtime search.  [Here's the experimental link]  If you are doing a case assessment and gathering information about an event, you may be able to focus on both the keywords and the location of comments made on Twitter.

Type in your search and your results will appear, and update, in real time.  You can use the Google Replay function to go back in time to see Twitter posts.  As of August 22, 2010 or so, you can restrict the search results by a geographic location.  This assumes that the person making the post was identifiable by geographic location.

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