Lawyers Come To Cyberspace
Attorneys can join the bar in all 50 states. In the District of Columbia. There's even a bar reserved just for those lawyers who argue cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Now there's a bar in cyberspace, too.
Calling itself the world's first online bar association, InternetBar.org says it was established to serve as a catalyst for advancing the rule of law in cyberspace and altering substantially current legal practice paradigms in the virtual world.
“We have founded InternetBar.org because we believe that an internationally networked community of lawyers, jurists and policy makers can effectively address emerging questions of the administration of justice, security and conflict resolution. We will be working on the internet in a trusted online space. We are creating a new, virtual form of self-governance,” says attorney and InternetBar.org President Jeffrey Aresty.
InternetBar.org says it seeks to create ethical ways for lawyers, jurists and courts to collaborate in cyberspace and harmonize the rule of law in the evolving virtual world. As a virtual bar association, InternetBar.org is dedicated to fostering widespread global collaboration, providing the highest quality education and training and undertaking sophisticated outreach.
Founded in 2005, InternetBar.org believes that an internationally networked community of lawyers, jurists and policymakers operating in trusted online forums can effectively address emerging questions of justice, security and conflict resolution through a new form of virtual self-governance.
InternetBar.org says it is dedicated to supporting individuals and businesses which are seeking access to legal information, cross cultural knowledge and alternative dispute resolution online.
Membership in InternetBar.org is free to anyone who shares its mission through 2007 and members will have the opportunity to be trained in in something called Online Dispute Resolution (ODR).
Bookmark http://universeeverything.blogspot.com/ and drop back in sometime.
Now there's a bar in cyberspace, too.
Calling itself the world's first online bar association, InternetBar.org says it was established to serve as a catalyst for advancing the rule of law in cyberspace and altering substantially current legal practice paradigms in the virtual world.
“We have founded InternetBar.org because we believe that an internationally networked community of lawyers, jurists and policy makers can effectively address emerging questions of the administration of justice, security and conflict resolution. We will be working on the internet in a trusted online space. We are creating a new, virtual form of self-governance,” says attorney and InternetBar.org President Jeffrey Aresty.
InternetBar.org says it seeks to create ethical ways for lawyers, jurists and courts to collaborate in cyberspace and harmonize the rule of law in the evolving virtual world. As a virtual bar association, InternetBar.org is dedicated to fostering widespread global collaboration, providing the highest quality education and training and undertaking sophisticated outreach.
Founded in 2005, InternetBar.org believes that an internationally networked community of lawyers, jurists and policymakers operating in trusted online forums can effectively address emerging questions of justice, security and conflict resolution through a new form of virtual self-governance.
InternetBar.org says it is dedicated to supporting individuals and businesses which are seeking access to legal information, cross cultural knowledge and alternative dispute resolution online.
Membership in InternetBar.org is free to anyone who shares its mission through 2007 and members will have the opportunity to be trained in in something called Online Dispute Resolution (ODR).
Bookmark http://universeeverything.blogspot.com/ and drop back in sometime.
Labels: attorney, court, cyberspace, Internet, law, lawyer, online
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