Monthly Archives: July 2009

New Lawyer Salary Distribution Has a New Shape

Bill Henderson, Empirical Legal Studies: The End of an Era: the Bi-Modal Distribution for the Class of 2008:

Of the 22,305 law school graduates in NALP's sample (over half of all 2008 graduates), a remarkable 23% (5,130 '08 grads) reported an entry-level salary of $160,000. In contrast, 42% of entry level lawyers reported salaries in the $40,000 to $65,000 range. Once again, the central tendencies are a poor guide to the distribution as a whole: whereas the mean salary is a $92,000, the median salary was $72,000. Further, the two modes ($50,000 and $160,000) are separated by $110,000.

Amidst all the layoffs, deferrals, salary cuts, and apprenticeship programs announced in 2009, it is safe to venture that the bi-modal era has peaked. Every law school class for the foreseeable future will graduate to a much different economic landscape. Although many students will regret the opportunity to earn such a big payday upon graduation, it brought with it intense billing pressure, client resentment, heavy leverage, and very little substantive training for new hires. I would argue that profession as a whole (including current and future graduating classes) is better off with a lower entry level salary.

Admittedly that is a long-term view for the profession as a whole. In the short term, current students and recent graduates are in a world of hurt.

And that hurt is spelled D-E-B-T. This has to have implications for law schools.

Posted in Law: Practice | Comments Off on New Lawyer Salary Distribution Has a New Shape

Someone Could Make Money on This

There's clearly a business model here for a multi-national legal partnership willing to provide this service at commodity prices.

Tales from the encrypt: the secrets of data protection | Technology | guardian.co.uk

But what if I were killed or incapacitated before I managed to hand the passphrase over to an executor or solicitor who could use them to unlock all this stuff that will be critical to winding down my affairs – or keeping them going, in the event that I'm incapacitated? I don't want to simply hand the passphrase over to my wife, or my lawyer. Partly that's because the secrecy of a passphrase known only to one person and never written down is vastly superior to the secrecy of a passphrase that has been written down and stored in more than one place. Further, many countries's laws make it difficult or impossible for a court to order you to turn over your keys; once the passphrase is known by a third party, its security from legal attack is greatly undermined, as the law generally protects your knowledge of someone else's keys to a lesser extent than it protects your own.

Finally, I hit on a simple solution: I'd split the passphrase in two, and give half of it to my wife, and the other half to my parents' lawyer in Toronto. The lawyer is out of reach of a British court order, and my wife's half of the passphrase is useless without the lawyer's half (and she's out of reach of a Canadian court order). If a situation arises that demands that my lawyer get his half to my wife, he can dictate it over the phone, or encrypt it with her public key and email it to her, or just fly to London and give it to her.

As simple as this solution is, it leaves a few loose ends: first, what does my wife do to safeguard her half of the key should she perish with me? The answer is to entrust it to a second attorney in the UK (I can return the favour by sending her key to my lawyer in Toronto). Next, how do I transmit the key to the lawyer? I've opted for a written sheet of instructions, including the key, that I will print on my next visit to Canada and physically deliver to the lawyer.

Someone could package this. There would be some details to work out, especially how best to transport the data (internet? post? special encrypted usb sticks?), but it could be done.

Posted in Cryptography, Law: Practice | 1 Comment

Why I’m Waiting to Install Firefox 3.5

I’m reluctant to upgrade to Firefox 3.5 because so many of my extentions are incompatible

Enabled Extensions: [28]

  • Adblock Plus 1.0.2 – Ads were yesterday! PASS
  • Auto Copy 0.9.7 – Copies selected text to the clipboard automatically. Like Linux or mIrc. 3.1
  • Better Gmail 2 0.8.1 – Enhances Gmail with a compilation of useful features written by Greasemonkey user script developers. All scripts copyright their original authors. Click on the script homepage in the Help tab for more information. 3.0
  • Better GReader 0.6.1 – Enhances Google Reader with a compilation of user scripts and skins. PASS
  • BetterPrivacy 1.29 – “Super-Cookie Safeguard” Unclear
  • CoLT 2.4.4 – Makes it easy to copy link text and locations. Unclear
  • CookieSafe 3.0.5 – Control cookie permissions. PASS
  • CustomizeGoogle 0.76 – Enhance Google search results and remove ads and spam. PASS
  • FlashGot 1.1.9.6 – Enables single and massive (“all” and “selection”) downloads using the most popular external download managers for Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and FreeBSD (dozens currently supported, see Extension’s Home Page for details). FlashGot offers also a Build Gallery functionality which helps to synthetize full media galleries in one page from serial contents originally scattered on several pages, for easy and fast “download all”. PASS
  • Gmail Manager 0.5.7.2 – Gmail accounts management and new mail notifications. PASS
  • Google Redesigned 0.3 – A complete redesign of popular Google services.PASS
  • IE View Lite 1.3.4 – Cut down version of IE View by Paul Roub. PASS
  • Java Console 6.0.13 Why is this still here? How do I get rid of it?
  • Java Console 6.0.14 ???
  • Java Quick Starter 1.0 ???
  • Map This 0.3.1 – Get map for a selected address PASS
  • Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant 1.1 – Adds ClickOnce support and the ability to report installed .NET Framework versions to the web server. No idea.
  • MR Tech Toolkit 6.0.3.3 – MR Tech Toolkit power tools for all users. (en-US) PASS
  • No Squint 1.93.2.1 – Manage site-specific full page and text zoom levels PASS
  • NoScript 1.9.5 – Extra protection for your Firefox: NoScript allows JavaScript, Java (and other plugins) only for trusted domains of your choice (e.g. your home-banking web site). This whitelist based pre-emptive blocking approach prevents exploitation of security vulnerabilities (known and even unknown!) with no loss of functionality — Experts will agree: Firefox is really safer with NoScript 🙂 Unclear
  • Resizeable Textarea 0.1d – Resize textareas to your needs. 3.1b3
  • ScrapBook 1.3.3.9 – Helps you to save Web pages and organize the collection.3.0 (Dealbreaker!)
  • Searchbar Autosizer 1.4.1 – Expand the searchbox as you type 3.0
  • Stealther 1.0.6 – Surf the web without leaving a trace in Firefox. 3.0
  • Tab Mix Plus 0.3.6.1.080416 – Tab browsing with an added boost. 3.1b2pre (eh?)
  • Targeted Advertising Cookie Opt-Out (TACO) 1.8 – Sets permanent opt-out cookies to stop behavioral advertising by 84 different advertising networks, including Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, all members of the Network Advertising Initiative, and many other companies. PASS
  • Update Notifier 0.1.5.4 – Notifies you when updates are available for your extensions and themes. 3.0
  • Xmarks 3.1.0 – Bookmark Sync and Web Discovery PASS

Note: the above is for my laptop; I’m afraid there are even more on the desktop…

Posted in Software | 13 Comments

Pressures Students Studying for the Bar Don’t Need

Miami Herald, FIU graduate robbed at gunpoint on campus

A recent Florida International University graduate, cramming for his Florida Bar law exam, was robbed at gunpoint of his laptop outside the school's Green Library, FIU police said.

Derrick Storms, 28, of Miami, who graduated from the law school in May, said he was sitting outside the closed library around 4:30 a.m. Monday when one of two teens on bikes approached him.

Being robbed is not a stress that bar-studying students need. Especially if they're so stressed that they're studying at 4:30 am.

Posted in Law School | 4 Comments

More Dan Links

Columbia Journalism Review (!), L'Affaire Froomkin, as Told by Froomkin

Marcy Wheeler's great liveblog of Jay Rosen interview wit Dan at the PDF meeting in New York (best quote, “Not offending people is not a business model.”)

Posted in Dan Froomkin | Comments Off on More Dan Links