Press
August 15, 2010: Ron Friedmann, Prism Legal, A New Generation of Online Legal Services? (“… Spindle Law should serve as inspiration for forward thinking firms that want to add value.”).
August 1, 2010: Robert Ambrogi, Law.com Legal Technology News, Crowdsourcing the Law (“The internet’s completely over, the musician once-again known as Prince declared last month. If so, I am at a loss to explain the ongoing emergence of innovative websites such as Spindle Law, a new site that is reconfiguring the traditional legal treatise to make it better fit a ‘Web 2.0′ world.”)
July 13, 2010: Laura Bergus, Lawyerist, Legal Research Gets Innovative with Spindle Law (“Spindle Law is unlike any research method you learned in school. To me, it is a backwards (read: totally intuitive) way of drilling into legal rules and finding the authorities to support them. . . . The site is very straightforward and easy to use, and has killer functionality.”).
July 12, 2010: Robert Ambrogi, LawSites, New Site Crowdsources the Legal Treatise (“Spindle Law . . . developed a structure for an online legal treatise that lawyers should find to be intuitive.”).
July 12, 2010: Legal Geekery, Podcast Episode 15 (“Laura talks with David Gold, CEO and co-creator of Spindle Law . . . . Spindle Law takes the contributor-driven genius of LII WEX and adds a layer of practical utility that could be every student and associate’s dream come true.”) (segment begins at 37:25).
May 24, 2010: Alex Lindahl, OpenEconomist, Spindle Law Crowdsources Legal Research (“From my understanding, current options for finding cases and concepts require inefficient databases that are both expensive and keyword driven. . . . Spindle Law aims to reduce the amount of irrelevant information in searches, provide a faster searching mechanism, and make it easier to find supporting cases.”).
May 24, 2010: Jason Mendleson, Mendelson’s Musings, Spindle Law — Crowd-Sourced Legal Research (“Cases and other legal sources are, more and more, out on the web for free. But until this information is well organized, practicing lawyers can’t make much use of it. Spindle Law may very well be how that organization will happen.”).
March 25, 2010: Simon Fodden, Slaw, Spindle Law, Treatise by Crowd (“[A] highly sophisticated setup. . . . Everything works. . . . I think it will be a boon to busy practitioners and students.”)
February 8, 2010: Huffington Post, Will Knowledge and People Converge (Paul Lippe interview of David Curle) (describing Spindle Law in answer to a question about “some of the recent major innovations in this market”).
December 8, 2009: David Curle, Spindle Law Takes New Approach to Legal Research (“Spindle Law is one of the more intriguing new approaches to legal research that have come along for a while.”) (subscription required).
