Business Services Industry
Brief Reporter Relaunched With New Features and New Look
Business Wire, May 9, 2000
Business Editors & Legal Writers
HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 9, 2000
Internet Law Library (OTCBB:ELAW) announced today that its wholly owned subsidiary, Brief Reporter LLC (http://www.briefreporter.com), relaunched its Web service with several new features and a complete graphical redesign of the site.
"Beginning May 8, 2000, Brief Reporter's Featured Brief of the Week will be available for online viewing at no charge," said Robert Anderson, general manager of Brief Reporter. Anderson said the site now offers an e-mail newsletter to notify users of the selected brief each week.
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Other new features include a Top 100 Legal Topics page and two new Topical Practice Centers designed to help attorneys who would rather browse than search.
"We've created topical pages on criminal and employment law, with more planned in the future," said Anderson. "With the new look and features on the site, we believe that we have improved overall usability, so it should be easier than ever for practitioners to find the legal briefs they need," he added.
Brief Reporter, one of the largest brief banks on the Internet, contains more than 6,000 legal briefs from previously litigated cases, and includes contact information for the authoring attorneys. Brief Reporter also offers free searching of the briefs, as well as free e-mail updates when new briefs are added. Full text of the briefs may be downloaded for a fee.
Together with its sister companies, National Law Library (http://www.itislaw.com/) and GoverNet Affairs (http://www.govaffs.com/), Brief Reporter is part of a full suite of legal research tools offered by Internet Law Library.
Certain statements in this release constitute forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Internet Law Library Inc. to be materially different from these expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors include: general economic and business conditions; competition; success of operating initiatives; development of capital and operating costs; market conditions; advertising and promotional efforts; adverse publicity; changes in business strategy or development plans; quality of management and other personnel; and government regulations.
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