Findlaw UK Debuts, Mostly Free Government Info

Posted in Business Information, Government, U.K., Westlaw | Tagged ,

I had a short post last week about some of the strange content discrepancies you can find on the regional sites powered by LexisNexis and Westlaw.  In the meantime, the Findlaw UK site has debuted so I decided to take a look and see how it was different from its US and Australian brethren.

I won’t pretend to have spent much time on it but all the content I did look at (particularly in the real estate (conveyancing) area) was either sourced to freely available government content or was unsourced.  At least with the other sites, you had identifiable content owners so you could get a sense of the reliability of the information.  Compare this Advice for First Time Buyers with its original at Direct.gov.uk.  The former is really just a cut and paste of text, while the latter, original, has additional cross-linking so that a reader who gets there might be able to click through to other Directgov content.  Even in the Ask a Question forums, you find that Findlaw staff are asking AND answering the questions.  I appreciate that new Web sites, particularly those developed primarily as marketing resources, need content, but this seems to take it a bit far.  When you click on contributor names, there is no information about what their qualifications are to answer the questions.  Legal researchers interested in UK legal issues would be better off going directly the Direct.gov.uk site, where there appears to be far more content and you are not one step removed from the publisher.

These sorts of sites can make Internet legal research much more difficult, since they are likely to be optimized to appear higher in search engines or else why would they be marketing sites?  But if their content is dated, or sourced from reliable sites and then not kept current with the original site, it means that you start to have unnecessary noise in legal research, particularly for non-lawyers researching on their own.  Legal research is enough of a bramble without adding confusing, duplicated and potentially dated content.

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Regional Differences Between Free Legal Sites

Posted in Australia, Business Information, Canada, LexisNexis, U.S., Westlaw | Tagged ,

The 3 global legal publishers (Reed Elsevier LexisNexis, Thomson Reuters Westlaw, Wolters Kluwer) often have regional sites that provide legal information.  It is surprising, though, the differences in quality of content, layout, and information available.  I recently happened upon Findlaw Australia, a Thomson Reuter’s property.  You can find information about lawyers there, as well as some recent articles posted by, one assumes, the lawyers whose names are attached.  But if you click on one of the Learn About the Law topics on the home page, you end up with a list of very dated content (in the case of Conveyancing, articles written in 2001).  It’s surprising to find that sort of currency issue with content on a major publisher’s Web property.

Contrast it to Findlaw.com, the US version, which does a better job of segmenting the layman from the professional, and provides much more current content.  If I follow the link about Learn About the Law to real estate, buying a home, I find an article giving an overview by a lawyer, dated 2007, and indicating it comes from the well-known public law publisher, Nolo.  Whether you’re in law practice or just trying to learn about a different area of law, you need to be careful even on major publisher’s Web sites to ensure that freely accessible content is current and attributable.

LexisNexis Canada recently announced an updated look for its online lawyers directory at http://www.canadian-lawyers.ca.  Like the regional Findlaw sites, the LexisNexis Lawyers.com sites have legal information for the public as well as resources (including marketing tools) for lawyers.   The legal content on the site is specific to Canada, but the law directory content appears to be the same as you would find if you searched for a Canadian lawyer at LexisNexis’ main, U.S.-based directory site, Martindale.com.  In fact, if you search from the newly revamped site, the URL changes slightly to yet another LexisNexis Web property, http://canada.lawyers.com and the content is identical to that on Martindale.

These sites can be useful resources for either finding a lawyer or finding an article on a research topic, but it shows that, even with leading legal publishers, you need to be aware of the currency of the content on the sites.  It also highlights that you might want to look outside your geographic area to get a more powerful, deeper versions of finding tools that are regional.

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