by polka_haunts_us on 2/1/2021, 6:00:53 PM
by giantg2 on 2/1/2021, 6:36:30 PM
I don't know anyone who has. I've sort of considered it. The cost in money and time for law school seems like it's not worth it.
And while I like to know and understand the law, I'm finding that more and more of the system is a sham. I've witnessed a trooper commit misconduct, like lying to a magistrate, and so many mistakes that his actions should be considered negligence. I have also witnessed 2 magistrates lack even a basic understanding of legal principles, like dismissing with prejudice or that a summary offense is a grading of a criminal offense. I even contacted a civil rights lawyer over some violations. He said there were rights violations, but without substantial financial impact the courts don't want to hear about it.
So I like the understanding the "code" of the legal system, but it seems like it isn't followed and that it's all double speak - rules for thee but not for me.
by relaunched on 2/1/2021, 11:52:24 PM
https://www.wsgr.com/en/people/barath-r-chari.html
Barath is a fraternity brother of mine, from Cal. He got a BA in CS, which is an impacted major you apply to after 2 years (super competitive). He went on to be a developer for Deloitte.
After a few years, he went to law school and started working at Wilson. He's now a partner and I believe he worked on Aurora's acquisition of Uber self-driving car IP.
by karmakaze on 2/1/2021, 7:10:18 PM
I knew a developer who actively studied law. It seemed to be a hobby but one that seemed dedicated enough that they could make the transition if they decided.
by davidwritesbugs on 2/1/2021, 7:37:33 PM
Me. Did a masters in IP law while working as a developer then qualified and moved over. Then sortof moved back. Long story.
I took a seminar in college on Intellectual Property Law where the instructor was a former developer who went to law school to be an IP Lawyer instead, specializing particularly in software. A friend of mine got a dev job at a FAANG out of college and hated it enough that subsequently they have been working as a non-dev in human rights policy type stuff, not quite lawyer but very similar trajectory.
Just a couple of examples.