In this post we share tips to protect you from malware, Harris County’s new Covid-10 juror procedure video, the new Zoom language interpretation service, and a web page showing how Covid-19 aerosol dispersion works.
In this post we share tips to protect you from malware, Harris County’s new Covid-10 juror procedure video, the new Zoom language interpretation service, and a web page showing how Covid-19 aerosol dispersion works.
Lots of news this time on court tech. We note news about the E-Courts Conference
agenda, a scientific study of reminder systems impact on court appearances, Rocketlawyer
using Utah’s Regulatory Sandbox project to test innovations, why Alexa shouldn’t
be installed on your court’s internal computer network, JAVS management software
suite announcement, a company that
specializes in work from home setups, ransomware at Tyler Technologies, and an amazing number of Tiny Chats produced by our NCSC colleagues.
Just a short note today that shows how tech can really help. In an article on Medium.com, we learned a hand signal has been created that can be used by web/video conferencing users to signal domestic violence.
Elizabeth “Barajas-Román, who is the president and CEO of
the Women’s Funding Network, a global philanthropic network dedicated to women
and girls, wondered: How could survivors reach out and get the help they need
in a safe way? The solution she landed on, with the help of a WFN partner
group, was Signal for Help, a simple hand gesture that people experiencing
abuse could silently use during video calls to tell friends or loved ones that
they’re in trouble.”
The result is the graphic shown above. The signalforhelp.net website has more.
The great benefit of this approach is that it leaves no trail on messaging or e-mail systems that the abuser can find.
Pass this along.
FTA or Failure to Appear and FTP, or Failure to Pay is the source of a great percentage of warrants issued by courts along with giving great stress to those involved.
I have been thinking about the civil unrest earlier this
year and the place that failure to appear warrants seems to be involved. In this post, I will share some recent
thinking about these warrants and some tech that can help?
The Innovation for Justice Program ( www.law.arizona.edu/i4j ) at the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law has issued a new and insightful report titled: The Utah Online Dispute Resolution Platform: A Usability Evaluation and Report (full report available online in PDF for download here)
It was announced that Texas District Court Judge Emily Miskel “who in May led the nation’s first-ever remote jury trial, is the recipient of the 2020 William H. Rehnquist Award for Judicial Excellence, the highest honor bestowed to a state court judge by the National Center for State Courts (NCSC). This prestigious award honors a state court judge who demonstrates the outstanding qualities of judicial excellence, including integrity, fairness, open-mindedness, knowledge of the law, professional ethics, creativity, sound judgment, intellectual courage, and decisiveness.”
With the success of web and audio hearings during the Covid-19 pandemic, courts have proven that absent/remote persons can be made available by mobile or computer. It is time now to make this standard practice.
One “unicorn” (a mythical goal) in Court Technology has been that Case Management Systems will have the ability to create comparative case statistics between court systems. Policymakers love that idea so they can compare and punish/reward, but also perhaps better understand policy differences. The announcement that got me thinking about this is the recent NIEM 5.0 announcement that included as part of their update preparation for the future addition of GISM (Generic Statistical Information Model).
Also, understand that the ideal statistical comparison system doesn’t stop between courts, it extends to the full criminal and civil court systems. That brings us to discuss the new announcements and what they might mean for our future unicorn hunting.
We have noted the increasing adoption of text reminders to case parties by the courts before. In this short “tech tip” post we will consider how we can add an automatic reminder via e-mail and even set up an online shared scheduling system?
Two announcements from Thomson Reuters, Quick Check Judicial, and the acquisition of the Caselines system.
August 19, 2020 – Thomson Reuters has introduced Quick Check Judicial, a new Westlaw Edge feature within Quick Check.