Teaching open source law | Opensource.com
page_amanda's bookmarks 2015-12-17
Summary:
"Many organizations use at least some open source code within their programs. So it is surprising that recent graduates who work with companies using open source software are usually ill prepared (or not prepared at all) to deal with open source legal issues. However, it is not the attorneys’ fault. Open source legal training is not easy to find, and if available it is not cheap. In the Bay Area, some law schools support an "open movement" policy. For example, some of them create and promote their own commons, meaning that the journals' articles are uploaded and distributed for free online. The schools' open access policies allow attorneys to stay up-to-date on their education, without the stress of paying for a subscription. (See SCU commons and UC Hastings.) Many schools also support patent reform. The schools hold patent reform panels, encourage professors to write articles about patent reform, and so on. These are probably the two largest open movement policies supported in the law school environment, which is commendable, but not enough."