7 Jul 2008
The Past is a Foreign Country:Old Rules+New Technologies = Surprising Risks
L.P. Hartley, the English author, once memorably wrote that “The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.”
I am not yet old enough to collect Social Security retirement benefits. When I attended law school and entered into the practice of law, people appearing to talk to themselves as they walked down the street were considered deranged; Bluetooth was a temporary dental problem resulting from eating fruit; Blackberries were a fruit; Google was the misspelling of a very high number; cells were places in jails where criminal clients were detained; Shepardizing a case involved red paperback books; and Spam was a canned pink gelatinous substance that pretended to be meat.
L.P. Hartley, the English author, once memorably wrote that “The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.”
I am not yet old enough to collect Social Security retirement benefits. When I attended law school and entered into the practice of law, people appearing to talk to themselves as they walked down the street were considered deranged; Bluetooth was a temporary dental problem resulting from eating fruit; Blackberries were a fruit; Google was the misspelling of a very high number; cells were places in jails where criminal clients were detained; Shepardizing a case involved red paperback books; and Spam was a canned pink gelatinous substance that pretended to be meat.
categories: Information Integrity, Legal Perspective


