Posts Tagged ‘Indian Kanoon’
October 25, 2012
Dr. Sushant Sinha of Indian Kanoon has posted Faster and More Relevant Kanoon!, at the Indian Kanoon forums.
He writes:
A new release of IndianKanoon brings in the following changes:
1. A new tiering function that slims down the top tier and significantly improves the time taken to execute a query.
2. A new ranking function to improve relevance.
3. Improved word matching and abbreviations. A search of “adm jabalpur” will match “additional district magistrate jabalpur”
http://www.indiankanoon.org/search/?formInput=adm+jabalpur
4. New operators ANDD, ORR and NOTT that can be used with words
5. Clicking on a document after a search query shows the contexts in the document in which the query appears.
6. Performance improvements coming from upgrade to Postgresql 9.2
For more information or to provide comments, please see the complete post.
HT @sushantsinha
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Tags:Boolean operators in legal information retrieval, Computer assisted legal research, Indian Kanoon, KWIC in legal information retrieval, Legal information retrieval, Legal search, Postgresql in legal search, Relevance in legal information retrieval, Sushant Sinha, Tiering in legal information retrieval
Posted in Applications, Technology developments | Leave a Comment »
July 1, 2012
Dr. Sushant Sinha, founder of Indian Kanoon, has been profiled by the Indian legal news source Bar and Bench, in Raghul Sudheesh’s article entitled Indian Kanoon: Bar & Bench talks to the mind behind Indian Legal Google (27 June 2012).
This article describes Dr. Sinha’s biography and education; his development of Indian Kanoon, a free legal search engine for India; the Indian legal information market; Dr. Sinha’s future plans for Indian Kanoon; and the role of Indian Kanoon in India’s democracy.
Sudeesh writes:
[Dr. Sinha] highlighted the role of law in our daily lives and said that his primary goal was to enhance people’s involvement and participation in the legal process.
For more information, please see the complete article.
For more information on Indian Kanoon, please see Dr. Sinha’s VoxPopuLII post entitled Indian Kanoon: The Genesis and the Legal Thirst; and my Slaw.ca post entitled Indian Kanoon: Sushant Sinha on Innovation and Free Law in India.
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Tags:Bar and Bench, Free access to law, Indian Kanoon, Public access to legal information, Sushant Sinha
Posted in Profiles | Leave a Comment »
April 29, 2012
A mobile version of Indian Kanoon, the free-access-to-law service for India, is now available, according to a new post by Dr. Sushant Sinha, creator of Indian Kanoon, in the Indian Kanoon forums.
Here is an excerpt from the post:
The Indian Kanoon website has a mobile version now. All pages are redesigned for fitting properly on small screen devices.
Tested on the android phone dell xcd35 and with various screen sizes in the android emulator. Feel free to report problems with your device. [...]
For more information, please see the complete post.
HT @sushantsinha.
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Tags:Computer assisted legal research, Free access to law, Indian Kanoon, Legal information retrieval, Mobile devices and legal information, Mobile devices and legal research, Mobile interfaces for legal information systems, Public access to legal information, Sushant Sinha, User interfaces for legal information systems
Posted in Applications, Technology developments | 4 Comments »
March 30, 2012
Dr. Sushant Sinha of Indian Kanoon has posted Daily updates from tribunals, in the Indian Kanoon forum.
Here is an excerpt from the post:
Daily updates from tribunals are integrated with Indian Kanoon. The source code for all of this work is released under GPLv3 license here http://code.google.com/p/judis-re/source/detail?r=11
Look at the tribunals section of http://indiankanoon.org/feeds/
[...]
The integration of tribunal judgments on Indian Kanoon was made possible by a grant from Public.Resource.Org
For more information, please see the complete post.
In a tweet today, Dr. Sinha adds:
After integration of tribunals with Indian Kanoon, the next thing is to support the website on mobile devices.
HT @IndianKanoon.
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Tags:Administrative law information systems, Administrative tribunal decisions, Free access to law, India, Indian Kanoon, Public access to legal information, Sushant Sinha
Posted in Others' scholarly or sophisticated blogposts, Technology developments | Leave a Comment »
December 13, 2011
Indian Kanoon, the free access to law service for India — created by Dr. Sushant Sinha — has added several new features that draw on user data. According to a post to the Indian Kanoon forums, the new features are:
- Search suggestions by user queries
- Boosting results by user click throughs
- A right navigation bar for related queries
- A left navigation bar for matching categories
- User queries for each document
For more information, please see the forum post entitled User Kanoon: Integrating user data for search improvements.
For more information about Indian Kanoon, please see my recent interview with Dr. Sinha, entitled Indian Kanoon: Sushant Sinha on Innovation and Free Law in India.
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Tags:Free access to law, Indian Kanoon, Legal information retrieval, Legal information system user interfaces, Public access to legal information, Sushant Sinha, User data in legal information retrieval, User data in legal information systems
Posted in Applications, Technology developments, Technology tools | Leave a Comment »
June 23, 2011
Full text of debates of the Lok Sabha — the lower house of the Parliament of India — from 1998 to present, are now available free of charge on Indian Kanoon, Dr. Sushant Sinha‘s free access to law service for India.
Lok Sabha debates on Indian Kanoon can be retrieved along with the texts of statutes and case law in multi-database searches, or can be searched in a stand-alone database.
In the text of Lok Sabha debates on Indian Kanoon, the name of each member of Parliament who speaks is hyperlinked, to enable quick retrieval of all statements by that member.
Dr. Sinha says that the debates database includes all Lok Sabha debates from 1998 to present that the Indian Parliament has made available, and that older debates will be added if the Parliament makes them available.
The debates have been added as part of a partnership between Indian Kanoon and PRS Legislative Research, which provides legislative history and research services to India’s national and state legislatures. PRS will use these debates to enhance its legislative information services offered to members of Parliament. In addition, members of Parliament and their staffs can search Lok Sabha debates directly on Indian Kanoon.
This provision of Lok Sabha debates on Indian Kanoon thus furnishes an example of how government employees use of free access to law services to obtain enhanced access to legal information, and thus potentially to improve the efficiency of government operations and services to citizens. Access to Lok Sabha debates on Indian Kanoon accordingly demonstrates how free access to law services can function as “extensions” of e-Government systems arising in the public sphere, as described by Robinson et al. in their important article, Government Data and the Invisible Hand.
Indian Kanoon now offers free access to more than 20 databases of Indian legal materials.
Today Dr. Sinha announced planned enhancements to Indian Kanoon, including “[c]ase summaries,” auto-completion of search queries, and improved relevancy of search results.
For more information on Indian Kanoon, click here for my extended interview with Dr. Sinha on Slaw.ca, the Canadian legal blog.
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Tags:egovernment, extended egovernment, Free access to law, Free access to law services as extensions of egovernment, Government use of free access to law services, India, Indian Kanoon, IndianKanoon, Legislative debates, Legislative information systems, Lok Sabha debates, Parliamentary debates, PRS Legislative Research, Public access to legal information, Sushant Sinha
Posted in Applications, Technology developments | Leave a Comment »
June 1, 2011
Dr. Sushant Sinha‘s free access to law service for India, Indian Kanoon, is the subject of my new, in-depth article on Slaw.ca, the Canadian legal blog.
The article provides a great deal of detailed information about Indian Kanoon, including information on technology and open source, users and usage, business models and sustainability, partnerships, product differentiation, advertising, Indian Kanoon‘s online forums, and Dr. Sinha’s innovative concept of “the thirst for law”: the idea, first expressed in Dr. Sinha’s recent VoxPopuLII post, that free access to law online stimulates the public’s demand for such access, in a virtuous circle.
The post also describes Indian Kanoon‘s new partnership with PRS Legislative Research, in which Indian Kanoon is adding to its content full text of the debates of the Parliament of India, which PRS will then use in providing legislative history and research services to members of India’s national and state parliaments. This partnership exemplifies how civil-society-based free-access-to-law services can function as “extensions” of e-Government, consistent with the vision set out by Robinson et al., in Government Data and the Invisible Hand.
I’m very grateful to Dr. Sinha for taking time for extensive interviews that provided the content of the article.
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Tags:Demand for legal information, Demand for public access to legal information, egovernment, Free access to law, ICT for development, ICT4D, Indian Kanoon, IndianKanoon, Innovation in legal information systems, Legal information retrieval, Legal information systems in India, Open source software in legal information systems, PRS Legislative Research, Public access to legal information, Relevance in legal information retrieval, Sushant Sinha, Sustainability of legal information systems, VoxPopuLII
Posted in Applications, Technology developments, Technology tools | Leave a Comment »
April 2, 2011
Prashant Iyengar of Alternative Law Forum and the Center for Internet and Society, has posted the abstract of his 2010 report on free access to law in India, entitled Free Access to Law: Is It Here to Stay? India, Country Report (July 2010), on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
Sometime in early 2008, Sushant Sinha, an Indian computer science doctoral candidate from Michigan University began offering free access to decisions of the Indian Supreme Court via his website IndianKanoon.org (IK) . In the ensuing two years, IK has grown exponentially and has become one of the most popular websites for accessing Indian legal materials, hosting over 1.2 million documents at the time of this writing. This paper is styled as a ‘case study’ that probes the IndianKanoon story – its genesis, successes and impacts – in some detail. This is also a paper that interrogates the conditions that make a site like IndianKanoon possible. It seeks an answer to the question: Viewed from what frame do the actions of one man unilaterally deciding to host over a million legal documents online for free become sensible?
For the full text of the report, please contact Mr. Iyengar.
Dr. Sinha recently described his system, Indian Kanoon, in a post at VoxPopuLII.
Mr. Iyengar recently wrote about free access to law in India, and about his free law system, OpenJudis, in a post at VoxPopuLII.
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Tags:Free access to law, Free access to law in India, ICT4D, IDRC, India, Indian Kanoon, IndianKanoon, Prashant Iyengar, Public access to legal information, Sushant Sinha
Posted in Technical reports | Leave a Comment »
March 18, 2011
Dr. Sushant Sinha of Yahoo! India has posted Indian Kanoon: The Genesis and the Legal Thirst, on the VoxPopuLII Blog, published by the Legal Information Institute at Cornell University Law School.
In this post, Dr. Sinha describes the origins and development of Indian Kanoon, the free legal search engine for India, for which Dr. Sinha was recently named one of “18 Young Innovators under 35 in India” by MIT’s Technology Review India.
Indian Kanoon provides free online access to Indian statutes, judicial and administrative decisions, debates of India’s constituent assemblies, reports of the Indian Law Commission, and articles from selected law journals. Indian Kanoon also hosts several discussion forums, in which users can ask and receive responses to questions concerning substantive legal issues or Indian Kanoon‘s functionality.
In his post, Dr. Sinha identifies as the principal goal of Indian Kanoon the “empower[ment of] citizens” by enabling them to become informed about “their rights and privileges” under the law.
Dr. Sinha observes that the number of visitors to Indian Kanoon is extremely large and steadily rising; and that the average visitor to Indian Kanoon spends substantial time viewing each retrieved document. Dr. Sinha concludes that these data indicate a growing demand among the Indian people for access to the law — a demand he calls The Legal Thirst — and considers possible causes for this increasing demand.
Dr. Sinha suggests that two factors in particular — the provision of access to law free of charge, and improvements in search technology, including “forgiving” keyword search functionality and the ranking of results by relevance — are fueling the desire of the Indian public to read the full text of the laws that govern them.
Dr. Sinha’s post will be of interest to legal information systems developers, legal publishers, the ICT for development community, and all those interested in the free access to law movement.
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Tags:Demand for legal information, Demand for public access to legal information, Free access to law, ICT for development, ICT4D, Indian Kanoon, IndianKanoon, Innovation in legal information systems, Legal information retrieval, Public access to legal information, Relevance in legal information retrieval, Sushant Sinha, VoxPopuLII
Posted in Applications, Others' scholarly or sophisticated blogposts, Technology developments, Technology tools | 3 Comments »
March 11, 2011
Dr. Sushant Sinha, creator of the free access to law service IndianKanoon, has been honored as one of India’s 18 top innovators, by MIT’s Technology Review, according to a post at rediff.com.
Click here, then click to slide number 18, to see the article.
The article states:
[Indian Kanoon] has been designed to provide the most relevant Indian laws and court judgments in response to a query. It enables people to quickly determine the standing law of the land on any issue and empowers them to seek justice.
The website has gained quick attention and is used by roughly half a million unique visitors and has more than two million page views every month.
With dual degree in computer science and engineering from Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, and PhD in the same discipline from University of Michigan, Sinha felt the need to generate awareness of laws among the citizens of India. In May 2007, he started developing the portal and finally launched it on 4 January 2008.
“Even when laws empower citizens in a large number of ways, a significant fraction of the population is completely ignorant of their rights and privileges. As a result, common people are afraid of going to the police and rarely go to court to seek justice. People continue to live under the fear of unknown laws and a corrupt police. I started the project as a way to enrich court judgments by linking them with laws and other references. The linking turned out to be so useful that I started building a search engine for Indian law. Indian Kanoon makes it simpler for people to access information on any law or judgment,” explains Sinha. [...]
Presently the Indian Kanoon hosts over 1.2 million documents. It is integrated with the Supreme Court of India, 22 High Courts, and 17 Tribunals to provide a real-time fresh judgments to the users. Sinha is now working on integrating the online channel further with all state laws and with different rules formed by government agencies. [...]
For more information, please see the article.
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Tags:Free access to law, Indian Kanoon, IndianKanoon, Innovation in legal information systems, Legal technology innovation, MIT, MIT Technology Review, MIT Technology Review India, Public access to legal information, Sushant Sinha, Technology Review, Technology Review India
Posted in Accolades, Applications, Professional activities, Technology developments, Technology tools | 2 Comments »