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How Collaboration and Crowdsourcing are Changing Legal Research

ThomsonReuters/Susan Martin: “Bob Ambrogi, lawyer, consultant and blogger at Law Sites, spoke at a well-attended session this morning at the American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) Annual Meeting. Titled “Playing Well With Others: How Collaboration and Crowdsourcing are Changing Legal Research,” Ambrogi’s presentation began with a light-hearted scolding of lawyers and legal professionals who simply “aren’t very good at sharing.” “Crowdsourcing requires sharing and lawyers tend to be very possessive, so that makes it difficult,” said Ambrogi. He cited the giants like Thomson Reuters, Lexis, and Bloomberg, who take raw legal information and have an army of editors who annotate it, organize it and comment on it. “But we don’t have all those paid people to do this for us when it comes to legal research on the internet. That is where crowdsourcing comes in,” he stated. Ambrogi…shared some examples of crowdsourcing gone wrong, where sites were built and abandoned or simply not updated enough to be effective…He then went on to showcase three examples of great crowdsourced sites:

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