Friday, August 06, 2010

Claim Preclusion = Res Judicata

http://www.caught.net/prose/resjud.htm

It's always hard to distinguish two mouthful concepts; Res Judicata and Collateral Estoppel.

Here is a short summary; Claim Preclusion = Res Judicata whereas Issue Preclusion = Collateral Estoppel.

Shortcut to memorize this is that there should be only one "C" in each equation.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

[ABA] Legal Writing: Ten Tips from the Trenches

http://www.abanet.org/yld/tyl/july10/writing.html

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

How to write like Elena Kagan

As a non-native, English writing would be my life-time burden.

As a way of improving writing, I sometimes study other persons' writing styles. One of sources I heavily rely on is LegalWritingPro.

Here's the material I received from the website;


WP's coverage on Supreme Court

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/package/supremecourt/index.html

Friday, March 19, 2010

Transcript of Senate's hearing about Comcast/NBC merger

Question - Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-Minnesota)
Answer - Brian Roberts (CEO of Comcast)

March, 11, 2010. Senate Commerce committee's hearing.

Senator: I know a lot of lawyers are looking at this deal. But I just thought I'd run through a few things that I heard and people raised with me about concerns. One is that NBC and its affiliates have succeeded in by getting its programmings to as many viewers as possible and providing its contents. ... for free over -the-air and over-the-internet. Will Comcast use NBC's 31% stakes in Hulu.com to restrict selection of NBC programming that is available in Hulu.com and NBC.com?

Brian Roberts: No. I've never even personally met with the Hulu team. We own about 31% in non-controlling stake. We have no intention of changing NBC's relationship with Hulu. And, Hulu itself, from what I read in the presses, is going through business model reviews and how-to funded and what the future will be. We are not at that table and I look forward to learning more about that business once we get together if we do get together.

Senator: Do you expect Comcast to block any NBC content from the Internet and what about charging subscribers' fees?

Brian Roberts: Comcast does not want to block NBC content or, frankly, block any content on the Internet. And ... my vision is that a content creator in different windows has different business models. Sometimes they wanna pay-per-view like in movie theatres and sometimes you do that in your home. Sometimes it's ad-supported only. Sometimes it's a part of subscription. And who knows what other business models will come out in the future. From Comcast's perspective, my vision is to ,technologically, create a platform to make sure that contents are not pirated or it's authentic(ated) and finding a way to let content companies create their own business models that work for their businesses into the future.