Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Time's Up for Naughty Nathan ... Recommendation that horrible NSW solicitor be derolled ... Misuse of online funding campaigns ... Spraying ripe and abusive language ... Trolling Robert Beech-Jones ... So unfit and improper as to be beyond reeducation ... Anthony Kanaan reports ... Read more >>

Politics Media Law Society


Sex, Bribes, and Club Fed ... Ms Maxwell comes out … Sex offender gets Bryan … The merry-go-round of sleaze … Protection rackets and shake-downs … Flashing orange light for Moloch … Thank God for rigged figures … Morpheus awake ... Read on >> 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

Wither the Republic ...Twenty years of Roger Fitch ... He says this is his last column from Washington ... A brief history of American law and governance since Bush II ... The Roberts' court and reshaping the Constitution ... Hollowing out the Bill of Rights ... Murdoch's malign influence ... Shakedowns and bribes ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Standing Council of Attorneys General ... Press conference with AG Rowland ... Regime to check people working with children ... Round and round the mulberry bush ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

Postcard from London ... Summertime - And the living' is easy ... Votes for 16-year olds ... Paralegal's theft by pen ... Spy helping British intelligence from his job at Border Force ... Super-injunction comes out of the shadows ... Feed them strawberries and cream ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt files from Blighty ... Read more >> 

"I've stopped six wars in the last - I'm averaging about a war a month. But the last three were very close together. India and Pakistan, and a lot of them. Congo was just and Rwanda was just done, but you probably know I won't go into it very much, because I don't know the final numbers yet. I don't know. Numerous people were killed, and I was dealing with two countries that we get along with very well, very different countries from certain standpoints. They've been fighting for 500 years, intermittently, and we solved that war. You probably saw it just came out over the wire, so we solved it ..."

President Donald Trump at a meeting in Scotland with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer ... July 28, 2025 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Schmoozing and Betrayal ... Judge Water Softener rides into Integrityville mounted high on his horse ... Judicial review of corruption finding ... Unprecedented assistance to morals monitor ... Plenty to think about ... Court reporter Ginger Snatch files ... Read more >> 

 

 

Justinian's archive

Abolish silks ... Sydney SC writes to the editor calling for abolition of the silk system ... Appointments are anachronistic ... It's not a matter of ability, only notability ... Secret blackballing ... "Corrupt" process ... Confessions from an insider who played the game ... From Justinian's Archive, October 24, 2002 ... Read more >> 


 

 

« Operatic costume change | Main | Terrorist haberdashers »
Sunday
Nov032013

Vic Supremes bungy jump experiment

Out of the closet ... Vic Supremes showing its face to the world ... NSW CJ skeptical about social media ... The rule-of-law - how to spread the message ... Alix Piatek reports 

Redmond Barry: free wifi in his courtTHE late Redmond Barry wouldn't have a clue what Marilyn (Earl) Warren was talking about. 

The lecture in Redmond's honour delivered a fortnight ago by Vic's CJ was a trumpet call to the future: a paperless court by 2016 - no more folders, no more trolleys; direct communication with the outside world through court sponsored blogs, Twitter and Facebook; an interactive website where the great unwashed can participate in forums, leave comments, download judgment summaries and watch the court in action by video on demand; a regular retired judge blogger; a LinkedIn account; and free wifi throughout the court. 

Modern as tomorrow. It's all about engagement, open justice and allowing the court to respond to criticism from crazed shock-jocks and idiotic newspaper columnists. 

Already the Supreme Court Twitter account has around 2,500 followers, with links to live action in the court, amendments to legislation, interviews with judges, and audio of sentencing decisions. 

For reporters it's a useful Twitter account to follow.  

Warren says she is ready for the online trolls, "either we do this openly or not at all - we just have to see how it goes". 

The Facebook page is up-and-running - with more to come. 

At least Vic Supremes has a "vision" of where things are now and will be tomorrow.  

Marilyn Warren: prepared for the trolls

Now go back to Redmond Barry's era and you get a rough idea of where you'll find the NSW Supreme Court - technologically speaking. 

No Titter, Facebook, blogging judges or free wifi. 

Bathurst CJ is hardly a leader in the field of technology. Here he is at the 2012 Law Term Dinner: 

"I do not Tweet, blog, krump or LOL ..." 

He went on to say:

"Community trust in the criminal justice system is eroding. Much of this distrust is fuelled by misinformation that is propagated by sections of the media who prefer to inflame rather than inform, and by politics that encourages fear mongering rather than educated debate." 

However, he doesn't think social media is necessarily the answer as a communication tool for courts. 

Instead, he is looking to more of the same: judicial participation in debates about crime and sentencing; "transparent dissemination of information" by government; and "plain and accessible" language by sentencing judges. 

Bathurst: End of civilisation

At the end of 2012 he gave another speech, Social Media: The End of Civilisation

It was an interesting assessment of the social media landscape and its impact on democracy and the rule of law. 

"Right now, Facebook is less than 10 years old. Google is 14 and Wikipedia 11. YouTube is only seven, and Twitter just six. These services are so new that the court's word processing software thinks their names are typos ..." 

His conclusion was that while social media is undeniably changing the world, "it is, on the whole, on a more modest scale than many seem to think".

Bathurst said he conducted a small experiment on Wikipedia about the way interactivity works: 

"I decided to anonymously edit my own Wiki to see how long it would take to be corrected. Well, I say 'I edited' really I conscripted a Gen-Y co-conspirator to edit on my behalf. Under 'personal life', my Wiki read: 'His personal interests are described as rugby, tennis, opera and travel.'

My co-conspirator added: 'He is also an avid bungy jumper and hip hop enthusiast.'

And then I waited. 

It took just four hours for this anomaly to be picked up by a Wikipedia user and deleted. 

While this makes my point, I must admit I find it hard not to take personally the idea of me bungy jumping or listening to hip hop is so blatantly ridiculous that it was dismissed by a complete stranger without second thought." 

For him there is a concern about the way social media is threatening property rights. 

"Two issues bound up with file sharing do challenge fundamental aspects of the rule of law. These are: widespread disregard for the law and barriers to enforcement ... 

Although file sharing will not spell the end of civilization on its own, it reveals the vulnerability we open our civilization to by integrating social media into our lives before the rule of law has been integrated into it." 

We asked the NSW Supremes for its latest position on the implementation of digital opportunities. We were knocked out to get this exciting response: 

"In response to your questions last week regarding social media, online judgments are presently posted on the internet and the court is giving further consideration as to whether it is appropriate to open a Twitter account." 

Resources

Chief Justice Marilyn Warren's Redmond Barry lecture  

Chief Justice Tom Bathurst on Social Media: The End of Civilisation? 

Chief Justice Tom Bathurst 2012 Law Term Dinner 

Bathurst's speeches 

Reporter: Alix Piatek

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.