This is part 2 (of 4) of a informal article written for the LAWASIA conference in Kuala Lumpur, 2008 (amended for context). Its a quick snapshot of the different types of Online Legal Research resources that are available in the Malaysian and Singaporean legal landscape.
Free Online Resources
Search Engines
The ubiquitous search engine is the first choice in any basic trawl for information. Search engines are able to give a snapshot of relevant sites, news, general details and principles. However, to get effective results, the technical limits of the search engine that is being used must be understood, as well as the context of the terms that are being searched for and also how the ranking and grouping of results takes place. For example, a search engine may not compile information or types of content from relevant jurisdictions or key sources, or may incorrectly give a low relevancy rank to a relevant website thereby relegating it to the third or fourth page. The user may never have the opportunity to access a relevant site, unless they are doggedly determined. Google has become synonymous with search engines, and with good reason. Its complicated algorithms and page rank analysis allow it to consistently display relevant and real results. Google was an internet leader in identifying the different silos and types of information online and making it easy for the user to sift through the type of content they wished to find. As such, Google has fostered a growing suite of specific services.One service is Google Books, which is a tool that searches the full text of books that have been scanned and stored in its digital database. A preview or snippet of the book is displayed based on the keywords the user has searched.
Besides Google, there are many other types of search engines which can cater more specifically to a user’s needs. Rednano.sg is a good case study. Red Nano searches over web content, and also the archives of The Straits Times (a leading Singapore newspaper) which are not accessible to other search engines. Immediately, the Singapore user is privy to search results that are more likely to be relevant. In addition, the results that are displayed are grouped firstly into findings from Singapore sources, and then into results gathered from the rest of the world. Another type of search is provided by Technorati.com which searches blogs and the other forms of independent, user-generated content (videos, photos etc) known as “citizen media”.
Article to be continued
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The age of the Infocalypse
This world is now a heaving social consciousness that shifts and proclaims and tweets and updates and spouts gouts of data, information and knowledge about itself. What was once a series of nodes, is now a singular navel gazing datastrosity that finds itself reflected in a mirror that reflects to eternity. Its holding a mirror to itself, speaking into a mouthpiece, without a filter, it has its own ear hard up against its mouth, and this mouth whispers and whispers and whispers information which people are free to attach and attribute meaning and to anchor celebrity and diggs and likes.
It is the age of the infocalypse, where everyone can choose to be the Protagonist. We are no longer mere consumers – we can take it upon ourselves and hide and block some and follow others. We can start our own memes, and incite our own flashmob.
Now is the time. Tom0rrow is the time. Anytime is a good time. The global village is no longer a village. We’ve upgraded and reached escape velocity. All information is now accessible if you have the user privileges. Google is going for the early land grab. Microsoft is making you view the land through their own window. How you see the information is a matter of the browser and the browsed.
What is next after the internet? Metaverse. Datafeed –> Omnifeed –> Food for thought.
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Posted in Commentary, Impact of the Internet
Tagged Add new tag, Consumer, Data, Google, Meme, Microsoft, Search, Search Engines, Tools