On Wednesday, March 28, I'll be participating in a meeting of Bay Area legal bloggers, sponsored by the at Santa Clara University. Topics will include First Amendment issues, how law firms can use blogs for marketing or educational purposes, how not to get sued or fired for blogging, and so on. I don't really have anything prepared, personally, but I can always dust off my interpretive dance on the Dred Scott case, which usually is a big hit for the first 10 seconds or so.
This event will cater principally to legal bloggers in the Bay Area, but everyone is welcome. There is even an hour of CLE credit available, although I expect that to plunge radically once the CLE people find out I'll be there.
Here's a handful of links to some of the other bloggers/blogs that should be showing up: Harry Boadwee (formerly of Intuit), the still-unnamed Blawg Review editor, Matt Cutts of Google, Stephen Diamond, Mike Dillon of Sun Microsystems, Sean Garrett of 463 Communications, Cathy Gellis, Eric Goldman of SCU, Joe Gratz of Keker & Van Nest, Beth Grimm, Patrick Guevara, Matt Holohan, Chris Hoofnagle of Boalt, Cathy Kirkman of Wilson Sonsini, Kim Kralowec of the Furth firm, David Levine of Stanford Law CIS, Mike Masnick of TechDirt, Mary Minow, Kurt Opsahl of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Leah Peachey of Meyers Nave, Aaron Perzanowski of Boalt, Elizabeth Pianca of Meyers Nave, Kristie Prinz, Colin Rule of eBay/PayPal, Colin Samuels, Erik Schmidt of SCU, Jason Schultz of EFF, Mark Smith of SCU, Transmogriflaw, Kevin Underhill of Shook Hardy and Bacon (me), and Colette Vogele.
Apparently, at least some of these people will be blogging about this event, so I may blog about them blogging about it. And we'll all blog about each other's blogging, until there is no more blogging to blog, or somebody organizes a Dungeons & Dragons game, whichever happens first.

