October 1, 2008

A Rant

Can I tell you what I'm tired of right now? I'm tired of getting calls from old media folks -- Martindale, West, Thompson, what have you -- telling me that I should pay a bunch of money so that they can teach me how to compete on the internet. Let me tell you something, guys -- I'm already competing on the internet. I already get many, many GOOD clients as a result of my website and this blog. I don't need a bunch of huge corporations, who finally decided that they should figure out whether this web thing is going to stick around, calling me and acting like they are experts. They aren't.

| Share
August 30, 2008

For Sale: www.probateblog.com

Sorry for the shameless sales pitch, but I own the domain name www.probateblog.com. If anyone is interested in purchasing it, I've placed it for sale at www.tdnam.com. Initial bidding is $200, and there's no reserve (I will take the highest bidder as of the end of the auction, on Friday, September 5th). If you're a probate lawyer looking to break into the blog market, please consider it. Thanks!

| Share
April 12, 2008

Podcast Status

A couple of things:

1. The podcasts don't take very long to record, but they take a while to write (no, for the most, I'm not improvising). I'll try to get the next one up this coming week, hopefully by Saturday at the latest.

2. You can now download the Death and Taxes podcast on iTunes. If you go to the iTunes store and search for "death and taxes blog podcast," you can find it. Unfortunately, I'm not sure how else you can find it -- there's no "legal" category in iTunes, so I'm stuck in the "business" category. Anyway, you can listen to or download individual episodes, or subscribe to the podcast.

| Share
March 9, 2008

Facebook and "My Own Last Wishes"

I've been spending a lot of time on Facebook lately, as my classmates and I reconnect and make plans for the (gulp) 20th reunion of the Marshall (Michigan) High School Class of 1988, this summer or fall.

As you may know, Facebook allows you to add applications to your profile page -- for photos, music, something called SuperPoke (don't ask), etc. Anyway, one of the applications is something called "My Own Last Wishes." Here's how it is described by its creators:

If you died tomorrow, would your family or friends know what your own last wishes would be? Would they know if you wanted to be an organ donor or what to do with your beloved pet? Would they know whether you wanted to be cremated and your ashes scattered on your favorite hiking trail or if you wanted to be buried dressed as Elvis, along with your prized bowling trophy, and accompanied to your gravesite to the strains of “Blue Hawaii”?

‘My Own Last Wishes” lets you give your family and friends a roadmap for your final journey and more.

I know that "My Own Last Wishes" is really just like any other application -- it's intended to waste a bit of time on the internet. But you can probably see the problem with this, can't you?

-Very few Americans have a Will. Presumably (hopefully) they understand that they need one, and that "My Own Last Wishes" is not a substitute for one. This doesn't create a legally-binding document.

-I also question whether "My Own Last Wishes" can even do what it says it's trying to do: "give your family and friends a roadmap for your final journey and more." How does your family know that you are on Facebook? Or know how to access your account? Or know that Facebook is where you listed your last wishes? And will they find all of this out soon enough after your death to cremate you, or bury you like Elvis?

| Share
January 23, 2008

The Return of the Death and Taxes Podcast

My friend Ellen and I did a podcast a few years ago on the Terri Schiavo case. I don't think anyone ever listened to it, and I eventually took it down. That being said, I've always wanted to revisit the world of podcasting. Probably because, when I was a kid, I wanted to be a disc jockey (or a fire truck, or a left-handed third baseman for the Cubs).

Anyway, I'm going to try to do a 10-part series called "Estate Planning 101." I hope to post a 5-10 minute podcast every week, and here's the tentative schedule:

Week 1: What is estate planning?
Week 2: Wills
Week 3: Living Trusts
Week 4: Health Directives
Week 5: The Estate Tax
Week 6: Simple Gifting
Week 7: Not-so-simple Gifting
Week 8: Probate Basics
Week 9: Trust Administration
Week 10: Probate and Trust Litigation

Now I just have to test whether I can upload an audio file to this page. If all goes well, Week 1's podcast will be up this week.

| Share
January 15, 2008

Chicago BlockShopper: What Fresh Hell Is This?

I first became aware of the idea of BlockShopper when a friend of mine, a partner at a big Chicago law firm, called to ask whether he could take title to his new townhome in a private manner. "What's the big deal?" I wondered.

The "big deal" (as a new client informed me last evening) is Chicago BlockShopper, a site that reports on real estate transactions in the (fairly upscale) Lincoln Park and Lake View neighborhoods of Chicago. (There's also a BlockShopper site for St. Louis.)

The articles look like those fake headlines you can make for someone's birthday or some other special occasion ("Cleveland OB-GYN Named Best Mom in America"). But in this case, the articles relate to the purchase and sale of real estate, and flesh out the identities of buyers and sellers with information gathered from other parts of the web. It's legal, of course -- I just question whether it's appropriate from a lack of privacy perspective. I guess you can always take title in a land trust, or change your name to John Smith.

| Share
October 17, 2006

Still Afoot: Changes to my Website

A couple of weeks ago, I talked about some new projects I'm undertaking on my regular site (www.jas-law.com).  One of those projects involves posting the entire Illinois Probate Act with (1) each code section on its own page and (2) comments and cross-references.  I've started in on this project, and hope to have it completed by the end of the year.  You can see a preview of how it will look and work as follows:

Click here to be taken to my Probate and Estate Planning-Related Statutes page.

Click on The Illinois Probate Act of 1975.

Click on Article I: General Provisions.

Click on any of the highlighted sections, such as 1-2.01. "Administrator".

| Share
September 4, 2006

Google Book Search

A few months ago I posted a review of Charles Dickens' Bleak House (here).  If you don't want to buy the book or check it out from the library, you now have another alternative: reading the entire book via Google.

1. Go to Google Book Search.

2. Type in "Bleak House."

3. Click on "full view books."

4. Click on "Search Books."

5. You'll get a list of the different versions of Bleak House you can read online.  What's nice is that you can read the actual pages, instead of just a text file.  Take a look at a random page from Bleak House, here.

Obviously there are lots of other classic public domain books available.

| Share
March 21, 2006

The New Money Magazine

I subscribed to Money magazine back in the go-go 90's, when it offered lots of investment tips.  Evidently the bursting of the tech bubble shook things up at the publication, since the new version of Money doesn't focus much on stocks and bonds.  I think that's a good thing, because the magazine now provides a lot of helpful information about maximizing your income and cutting expenses.  For instance, recent articles detail specific steps you can take to reduce energy costs and to take control of your credit score.

The April 2006 issue of Money arrived just a few days ago, and it has lots of goodies, including some articles that touch on estate planning and probate issues:

-an article on reverse mortgages, with a sidebar offering advice to those who inherit a house with a reverse mortgage;

-an article that discusses "What you need to ask yourself when you're asked to care for a loved one's children" after the loved one passes away; and

-an article on prenuptial agreements.

One downside to Money: it seems to have almost zero internet presence.  This appears to be the magazine's homepage, and it offers very little in the way of articles -- plus, the articles it does offer relate mostly to stocks and such.  That's a shame, since the new version of the magazine provides so much more.

| Share
August 30, 2005

Assessments and Privacy

One issue I've been following since I began this blog involves privacy and public records on the internet.  This article details a Pittsburgh-area politician's attempt to prevent public searches on the Alleghany County Assessor's website.  The goal of the politician (Councilman William Robinson) is to prevent criminals from being able to easily find personal information for individuals owning real estate in Alleghany County.  (The public could still obtain such information by filing an official request -- it just wouldn't be available immediately via the internet.)

Councilman Robinson's goal may be laudable, but it seems to provide an overly-broad solution to a fairly narrow problem.  As mentioned in the article, the Assessor's website provides lots of different information to its visitors.  Some of that information is very important and raises very few privacy concerns (for instance, the information on assessments helps in the assessment appeals process).  Other information strikes me as less valuable and more intrusive (allowing searches for property by the owner's name).

A couple of other points:

1. It's also worth noting that the website no longer includes the names of federal, state or local judges.  The tricky question (raised here by the president of the Pittsburgh chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police) is, why stop with judges?  And, if we don't stop at judges, where do we stop?

2. It's fairly easy to take title to property in a way that provides some privacy protection (by doing so via a land trust or a corporation, for instance).  However, is it really fair to make privacy protection available only to those who are wealthy and/or sophisticated enough to use these vehicles?

| Share
July 6, 2005

Google Earth and Chicago Real Estate

Wow, did this blow my mind, in two ways:

1. First, we start with Google Earth, which is sort of a cross between Google Maps and a video game where you play the Incredible Hulk.  Once the software is downloaded, you can "jump" to any address in the world (you can also get directions and find local businesses).  Note that this is a pretty big, pretty graphics-intensive program, but you'll have to trust me -- it's totally worth it.

2. Then, we install the Prudential Properties plug-in for Google Earth, as detailed in the above article.  Now we can race around Chicagoland, looking at various "for sale" properties by location, and then clicking on a property for more details.  Previously I wrote about how Craigslist + Google Maps represented the future of real estate, but I was wrong -- the future is still being written, and the next chapter has arrived.

| Share