Posts Tagged ‘Open Government: Defining Designing and Sustaining Transparency’

Law.gov Upcoming Events [Updated]

March 10, 2010

[Click here for the latest update on Law.gov.]

[NOTE: These events are being tweeted on Twitter at #lawgov.]

The next announcement of events related to the Law.gov legal open government data project is expected to be issued during the week of 6 September 2010. Click here for the latest update on Law.gov.

Click here for video of previous Law.gov events.

Click here for the agendas of all of the Law.gov events held in the first half of 2010.

Click here for archived Twitter tweets from many Law.gov events.

HT Carl Malamud.

[This post was last updated 10 July 2010.]

Law.gov: Upcoming Events

February 15, 2010

[NOTE: Click here for a more recent version of this list of events.]

[NOTE: These events are being tweeted on Twitter at #lawgov.]

Here are upcoming events in connection with the Law.gov legal open government data project:

HT Carl Malamud.

[NOTE: Updated on 9 March 2010, to add the May events indicated, and to delete the February events. Updated on 16 February 2010 to link to the New York Law School event.]

Video Available for Princeton Open Government Workshop Panels & Law.gov

January 27, 2010

Videos are now available for all of the workshop panels and the Law.gov panel from Open Government: Defining, Designing, and Sustaining Transparency (POGW), a workshop held 21-22 January 2010 at Princeton University’s Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP).

Click here for a summary of the legal-information-related discussion at the workshop.

Glassmeyer on Radical Trust & Legal Information

January 27, 2010

Sarah Glassmeyer, Reference and Access Services Librarian at the University of Kentucky College of Law, has written an interesting post about the authentication of digital legal information, entitled Radical Trust and Legal Information.

Glassmeyer argues that concern over authentication of digital legal resources published by free access to law services such as the Legal Information Institute at Cornell University (LII) is overstated. Glassmeyer argues that free-of-charge legal resources published by reputable institutions like the LII should be considered reliable if they accurately reproduce the data in the original versions of the resources published by the government, even in the absence of formal authentication.

Glassmeyer analogizes the confidence that the legal community should place in respected free access to law services, to the “radical trust” that Web 2.0 services — and their readers — place in user generated content.

Glassmeyer’s post is the latest contribution to the recent, lively discussion of authentication of digital legal information. Other contributions to this discussion include John Joergensen’s recent post on embedded metadata and authentication at the Hacked Librarian blog, and the conversation about authentication at the Law.gov panel at last week’s Princeton Open Government Workshop.

Work Has Begun on the National Inventory of Legal Materials, Related to Law.gov

January 25, 2010

[NOTE: Click here for an update on the National Inventory, from Erika Wayne (15 June 2010).]

Work has begun on the National Inventory of Legal Materials, a component of the Law.gov legal open government data project, according to Erika Wayne of the Stanford University Robert Crown Law Library.

(Click here for background information on the Law.gov project.)

The Twitter hashtag for the National Inventory is #NILM. Click here for archived Twitter tweets about the National Inventory.

According to Wayne, the National Inventory will consist of a list “of all primary legal materials” in the U.S. — “describing, detailing, and cataloging where one can find the laws of our Federal and State systems — and also of certain secondary legal resources that “are created as part of” administrative, legislative, or judicial law-making processes, ranging from “briefs and filings of attorneys to congressional testimony.”

Wayne states that, in order to “create this list, we will need the collaboration of librarians and researchers across the country” to engage in tasks including “the creation of the categories that we would use for collecting the information” and “the data entry itself.”

Wayne announces in her post that the first project related to the National Inventory will be organized by NOCALL, the Northern California Association of Law Libraries, which has established “a task force dedicated to creating a micro-inventory, focusing on California materials. We are using a shared spreadsheet and just beginning to fill out rows and columns.”

Wayne concludes, “If you want to help on the inventory, please let us know. What NOCALL is starting can and should be replicated in other areas.”

For more information, please see Wayne’s entire post.

[This post was last updated 15 June 2010.]

[NOTE added 2 March 2010: National Inventory of Legal Materials: A Call to Action is now available; per @evwayne, it "offers guidance and suggestions for creating the inventory."]

[NOTE: On 28 February 2010, a request for comments on an inventory of California legal information -- a prototype for the National Inventory of Legal Materials and a component of the Law.gov legal open government data project -- was issued by Erika Wayne. Click here for more details.]

[NOTE: On 22 February 2010 the American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) Government Relations Office announced that they and Erika Wayne of the Stanford University Law Library have begun to organize working groups to build the National Inventory. HT @caminick.]

Legal Information Issues at POGW: Princeton Open Government Workshop

January 24, 2010

[NOTE: Updated on 27 January 2010 to link to videos of all of the workshop panels, and video of the Law.gov panel. Updated on 25 January 2010 to link to the Google Wave for this workshop.]

The workshop entitled Open Government: Defining, Designing, and Sustaining Transparency (POGW), held 21-22 January 2010 at Princeton University’s Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP), featured much valuable discussion about legal information.

Click here for videos of all of the workshop panels.

(The Twitter hashtag for the workshop is #pogw. An apparently complete collection of tweets from the workshop is available here. My tweets from the workshop are available here.)

(Click here to go to the Google Wave for this workshop.)

This law-related discussion included a panel (scroll down) about the Law.gov legal open government data project, held on 21 January (Twitter hashtag: #lawgov.)

Click here video of the panel.

The POGW Law.gov panel participants were:

Here are my notes on the legal-information-related discussion at POGW:

During the panel on “Defining Transparency” (click here for video), Professor Helen Nissenbaum of New York University argued in favor of editing court records before they are released online to the public. Under a “principle of reduction,” according to which government information should be rationalized and streamlined before public dissemination in order to prevent information overload and violation of privacy rights, Nissenbaum urged the adoption of information policies requiring each government agency to:

  • identify its purposes and functions;
  • identify its needs and the needs of its public users respecting the information the agency produces; and
  • before disseminating the information the agency produces, edit that information in light of the agency’s purposes and functions and the information needs of the agency and its public users.

According to Nissenbaum, in the case of court records, a judicial system might identify such concepts as “dispute resolution” and “access to justice” among its purposes; might identify “protecting privacy rights”, “facilitating accountability of judges,” and “enabling self-represented litigants to navigate the court system” as among the information needs a judicial system might identify; and might require redaction of personally identifying information from court records prior to online dissemination, in order to protect those privacy rights. Nissenbaum suggested that a court system might engage in other types of editing of court documents prior to online dissemination, but did not specify.

During the panel entitled “Designing Transparency” (click here for video), Joshua Tauberer of GovTrack.us announced the availability of a new service called govtrackinsider.com, which combines journalism with the legislative data from GovTrack.us.

During the panel entitled “Sustaining Transparency” (click here for video), Mike Wash, Chief Information Officer of the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), discussed a number of issues respecting digital legal information, with a focus on GPO’s new FDsys content management system. Wash noted that FDsys has been developed to serve four key functions: versioning, preservation, permanent public access, and authentication. He said that FDsys uses Public Key Infrastructure and the digital signature tool in Adobe Acrobat to authenticate digital legal information. He said that, although the XML bulk data versions of the Federal Register and the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) now available for download from FDsys are not currently authenticated, GPO plans to implement authentication of those sources in 2010. He stated that GPO and other federal agencies currently use an outdated locator-code composition system to write federal legal documents, and that GPO is currently transitioning to a new system that enables composition of legal documents in XML. In addition, he observed that GPO is reformatting SGML documents contained in GPO’s legacy GPO Access system into XML.

The Law.gov panel on 22 January (scroll down) (click here video) began with an overview of the Law.gov project given by panel moderator Carl Malamud of Public.Resource.Org. (Click here for more information about the Law.gov project.) Malamud described the history of digital legal databases in the U.S., beginning with the U.S. Air Force’s FLITE database and the U.S. Department of Justice’s JURIS database, and continuing through the development of the Mead Data Central/LexisNexis and Westlaw databases, to the rise of free access to law services beginning with the Legal Information Institute at Cornell University Law School, and then to low-cost legal databases such as FastCase and Justia, and new free services such as AltLaw, the Rutgers Camden Digital Collections, and Princeton’s RECAP service.

Malamud stated that the Law.gov project will proceed in three stages:

  • 1) hold meetings (including this one) across the U.S.;
  • 2) write a report;
  • 3) lobby the U.S. federal government to create a national registry of federal law, and to require each law-making federal entity to authenticate all digital legal information it produces.

Malamud identified two rationales for Law.gov:

  • 1) enabling innovation: he noted the high cost — which he estimated at $10 million to $30 million — to acquire a complete collection of U.S. primary law, and he characterized this cost as a barrier to innovation; and
  • 2) democracy: he said that the current system of requiring U.S. citizens to purchase access to primary law restricted their ability to participate in politics and in society.

Tom Bruce, Director of the Legal Information Institute (LII) at Cornell University Law School, began his presentation by recounting the history of the free access to law movement. He noted that in 1992, he and Cornell’s Peter Martin founded the LII as the first legal information site on the Internet. A short time later, the Canadian CanLII service and the Australian AustLII service began operations. He stated that today, there are more than 20 free access to law services around the world.

Bruce identified several factors that foster demand for free access to law, including globalization, which requires millions of market participants to know the laws of foreign jurisdictions; and government employees’ dissatisfaction with the quality of access to the laws promulgated by their own governments, available via print sources or fee-based legal information services.

Bruce then identified several normative arguments in favor of free access to law, including:

  • facilitation of trade;
  • enabling governments to operate more efficiently;
  • enabling organizations and individuals to engage in risk management; and
  • reducing the costs of regulatory compliance and litigation.
  • Bruce noted that free access to law services differ markedly in the scope of information that they publish, with most offering selected content for their jurisdictions, while a few offer comprehensive collections of primary law. He also observed that some free legal information services publish only national legal material, while others publish some combination of national and either local or international legal information.

    Bruce asserted as well that some free access to law services view themselves as permanent, while others, such as SAFLII, consider at least some of their functions to be temporary, and to be transferred to other entities at some point in the future.

    Bruce stated that free access to law services exhibit a variety of models of sustainability, with some services, such as CanLII and AustLII, imposing a tax on users, and others, including Cornell’s LII, relying on grants and donations. He stated that for most free legal information services, sustainability has been challenging, because, although grant funding is readily availability for starting a free access to law service, few institutional resources are available to fund ongoing operations, and few public users of these services are willing to furnish financial support.

    Bruce observed that a number of standards for free access legal publishing have been developed, including URN: LEX and MetaLex, but that free access to law services have been reluctant to embrace these standards. He suggested that resistance to standards has been based largely on the claims that legal resources feature too many exceptions to be standardized, and that implementing standards would divert scarce time and resources from the more important task of publishing the law. He asserted that these concerns were overstated, and that legal document attributes around the world are much more similar than has usually been acknowledged.

    Stephen Schultze, Associate Director of Princeton’s CITP, then discussed PACER, the U.S. federal court document database, and CITP’s RECAP tool. Schultze explained that PACER, which was developed and is run by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts (AOUSC), is built to gather filings from the electronic case filing system now used by all U.S. federal courts.

    Schultze identified several shortcomings of PACER:

    • Because Congress requires PACER to be self sustaining, the AOUSC has placed PACER behind a paywall, and charges 8 cents per page for access to all PACER documents, including dockets (with an 8 cent charge for each PACER search that retrieves no documents); yet charging for PACER may be inconsistent with other federal law;
    • PACER’s search functionality is poor;
    • PACER documents, including dockets, are not structured, and this characteristic inhibits interoperability and reuse of those documents;
    • PACER documents are not authenticated;
    • PACER features a poor user interface design; and
    • Many court records in PACER display personally identifying information, contrary to law.

    Schultze noted that recently passed Congressional language urges the AOUSC to take steps to offer free access to PACER.

    Schultze then described RECAP, a Firefox plugin that takes downloaded PACER documents, uploads them to an open online repository, marks them up in XML, and alerts PACER users when a document they are seeking from PACER is available free of charge from another source.

    Schultze explained that the RECAP team at CITP is now urging the AOUSC to reform PACER in the following ways:

    • As soon as possible:
      • make PACER searches and dockets free of charge;
      • lower PACER page charges;
      • authenticate all PACER documents;
    • By mid 2010:
      • make all PACER documents available in a structured format, such as XML; and
      • offer RSS feeds to alert users of new PACER content;
    • By the end of 2010:
      • make all PACER content available to the public free of charge.

    John Joergensen, creator of the Rutgers University Camden Law Library Digital Collections, began his presentation by describing the development of those digital collections. He recalled admiring Cornell’s LII, and desiring to offer a similar service for New Jersey law. Eventually, he succeeded in gaining access first to New Jersey Supreme Court decisions, due to the willingness of the Chief Justice of that court to provide long-term, free of charge public access to the court’s case law. Next Joergensen arranged to publish New Jersey’s administrative decisions, and then slip opinions of the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.

    Joergensen stated that this digital publishing effort has been sustained because of the support of the dean of the Rutgers Camden Law School and the director of the Rutgers Camden Law Library, and the inclusion of funding for the effort in the law library’s regular operating budget. Joergensen noted that the role of these digital collections is to furnish long-term, free of charge online public access to legal documents, to complement the short-term online access provided by the tribunals that create these documents.

    Joergensen then discussed authentication of digital legal information. He noted the tension between the values of authentication and wide public access to digital legal documents, and argued that, when these values conflict, access should prevail: authentication should not be used as an excuse to restrict public access to the law. He also observed that judges and practicing lawyers rarely use authenticated legal information: rather, they use unauthenticated documents retrieved from Westlaw, Lexis, PACER, and other online services.

    Joergensen recommended relinquishing the term “authentication” in favor of different terminology: he preferred the notion of a “definitive” original version of each legal document, from which multiple “accurate” copies are made. He asserted that the “accuracy” of the copies can be determined by checksums, and descriptions of the chain of custody of, and alterations to, the copies, with all of this information being recorded as embedded metadata in the copies.

    Joergensen argued that the key issue respecting the integrity of digital legal information concerned alterations to digital legal documents due to fraud or mistake. He contended that checksums and provenance information, embedded in each copy of a digital document, suffice to address that issue.

    With respect to preservation of digital legal information, Joergensen emphasized the importance of having multiple copies of each document held by a variety of repositories, so that public access to each document is secure notwithstanding the failure of one or more repositories. He argued that, in the current, volatile economic and technological environment, characterized by the frequent “creative destruction” of public and private entities, public access to digital legal information is at risk if any one entity becomes the sole source of that information.

    In the discussion following the panelists’ presentations, the following comments were made:

    • Joergensen argued that law school users and legal practitioners prefer legal information in digital format, because that format is easier to use and saves space. He argued that long-term preservation of digital legal information is a core responsibility of legal information institutes and law libraries.
    • Bruce discussed the funding model for CanLII. He noted that CanLII’s board consists of representatives of the Canadian bar associations, to which Canadian lawyers are required to belong, and which tax their members to fund CanLII. He argued that this model can’t be duplicated in the U.S., where bar associations have less authority than in Canada.
    • On the prevalence of fraud- or mistake-related errors in digital legal information, Bruce cited research done by Cornell’s LII showing little evidence of such errors, but he noted that cases involving such errors usually settle, resulting in a meager paper trail. Joergensen said he was unaware of any incidents of such fraud or mistake.
    • Malamud noted that Law.gov seeks to require authentication of all federal digital legal information by the promulgating agency at the time of publication.
    • Bruce contended that legal research is a form of risk management or insurance, and that individuals and organizations will only engage in, or pay for, a limited amount of legal research, because users “will only insure to the value of the goods.” He noted that authentication adds costs to legal information that many users will not pay for. He further observed that many users of legal information use branding as a proxy for authentication; to the extent they have confidence in the publisher’s brand, they trust that the information obtained from that publisher is reliable.
    • Respecting redaction of legal documents prior to publication, Malamud noted that existing law already prohibits publication of personally identifying information in federal legal documents, but that his audit found inadequate enforcement of that law. Schultze contended that software can detect most personally identifying information. Malamud and Schultze agreed with Nissenbaum that courts should decide what legal information they release. Bruce cited http://www.whosarat.com/ as an example of problems arising from public disclosure of personally identifying information: after a firm published names of individuals (gathered from PACER) who entered into plea agreements with federal prosecutors, federal authorities considered barring public access to documents relating to those agreements. Bruce observed that privacy concerns vary considerably among legal contexts. He cited the reports of the New York State Commission on Public Access to Court Records, and the work of Peter Winn on privacy issues respecting public records. Joergensen and Malamud both said that when they receive a privacy-related complaint about a digital document in one of their collections, they block search-engine access to the document by means of a robots.txt file, but they do not withdraw the document from the collection.
    • Respecting preservation, Schultze and Joergensen discussed the need to replicate the definitive original copy of each digital legal document. Joergensen expressed concern that for some U.S. digital legal information, a private firm was the sole source, and that this lack of redundancy jeopardized long-term public access to that information.

    Apart from the panel presentations, legal information was also discussed during informal conversations at the workshop. Here are some topics that were discussed informally:

    • Some participants expressed concern that rapid technological change coupled with expected severe federal government budget cuts in the coming years will lead to the elimination of a number of federal government agencies. Since some of those agencies may be publishers of digital legal information, some participants urged that steps be taken soon to achieve redundancy of digital legal information resources published directly by federal government agencies, and to prepare for the transfer of such publishing functions to other agencies, or to civil society organizations.
    • Princeton’s CITP is considering adding federal legislation to its FedThread service, and is considering testing tools that would enable users to comment on each paragraph of bills currently before Congress.
    • Semantic Web and Linked Data technology were much discussed at the workshop, and several more U.S.-based law-related applications of this technology may be announced in the coming months.

    Thanks to Professor Edward Felten, Dr. Joseph Lorenzo Hall, and Stephen Schultze for a very rewarding conference.

    January 22: Law.gov Panel at Princeton’s Workshop: Open Government: Defining, Designing & Sustaining Transparency

    January 20, 2010

    [NOTE: Updated on 27 January 2010 to link to video of the Law.gov panel and of all of the workshop panels, and to
    a summary of the Law.gov panel and of legal-information-related discussion at other workshop panels. Updated on 23 January 2010 to link to the Google Wave for this workshop, to what appear to be all tweets from the workshop, and to my tweets from the workshop.]

    A panel (scroll down) about the Law.gov legal open government data project, will be held 22 January 2010, at the workshop entitled Open Government: Defining, Designing, and Sustaining Transparency, at Princeton University’s Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP), in Princeton, New Jersey, USA.

    Click here for video of the Law.gov panel.

    Click here for video of all of the workshop panels.

    Click here for a summary of the Law.gov panel and of legal-information-related discussion at other workshop panels.

    Click here to submit questions for the panel discussion, via Google Moderator.

    The Twitter hashtag for the workshop is #pogw. The Twitter hashtag for the Law.gov project is #lawgov.

    Click here for what appear to be all tweets from the workshop. Click here for my tweets from the workshop.

    Click here to go to the Google Wave for this workshop.

    The panel participants will include:

    For more information on the panel, please see the workshop’s Website.

    Click here for more information about the Law.gov project.

    Law.gov: A Law-Related Open Government Data Project

    December 13, 2009

    [NOTE: Click here for information on upcoming Law.gov events.]

    Law.gov is a recent, U.S.-based, law-related open government data project, organized by an open access publisher of government information, called Public.Resource.Org. According to the project’s Website, Law.gov has as its goal to write “a report documenting exactly what it would take to create a distributed registry and repository of all primary legal materials in the United States.”

    Law.gov has issued The Law.gov Principles and Declaration (a.k.a. The Law.gov Core Principles), which express the project’s goals, and the expected consequences were the goals attained.

    Law.gov seeks to make U.S. federal, state, and local legal information available free of charge on the Internet, in a manner designed to maximize interoperability and ease of access and to facilitate reuse. The organizers see the U.S. Government’s Data.gov project as a model for Law.gov.

    [At the Columbia University Law.gov Workshop held 25 February 2010, Carl Malamud announced that three task forces would be organized to carry out major parts of the project's agenda:

    The Twitter hashtag for the Law.gov project is #lawgov.

    The Law.gov Project has a Google group, where announcements, resources, and discussions are available.

    Click here for video of Carl Malamud’s address entitled Law.Gov: America’s Operating System, Open Source, given at Gov 2.0 Expo 2010, on 27 May 2010, in Washington, DC, USA.

    Click here for the Radio Berkman podcast about Law.gov, recorded 25 February 2010, with Carl Malamud and David Weinberger of Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

    The Law Library of Congress is also working in this area. Click here for information about the Law Library of Congress’s efforts to register the Law.gov domain, and its statements about its relationship with the Law.gov project.

    The American Association of Law Libraries issued a statement in connection with Law.gov, entitled AALL Statement on Legal Materials and Our System of Law (May 25, 2010).

    Content for the Law.gov report is to be generated in part through a series of meetings to be held during the first quarter of 2010 — click here for all of the meeting agendas — and co-organized by faculty or staff at the law schools of Columbia University, Harvard University, Stanford University, the University of California Berkeley, and the University of Colorado; Northwestern University’s Oyez Project; Princeton University’s Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP); Cornell University’s Legal Information Institute; O’Reilly Media; and the Center for American Progress.

    A panel entitled Law.gov: A Revolution in Legal Affairs was held on 12 January 2010 at Stanford Law School in Palo Alto, California, USA. The panel will include Anurag Acharya of Google Scholar, a representative of Public.Resource.Org, and Professor Jonathan Zittrain of Harvard Law School, and will be moderated by Roberta Morris of Stanford Law School. Click here for video of this panel. HT @evwayne.

    A panel about Law.gov (scroll down), and featuring Tom Bruce of Cornell’s Legal Information Institute, John Joergensen of Rutgers University Camden Law Library, Stephen Schultze of Princeton’s CITP, and personnel from Public.Resource.Org, was held on January 22, 2010, at the workshop entitled Open Government: Defining, Designing, and Sustaining Transparency, at Princeton University’s Center for Information Technology Policy. (See video, tweets, and a summary. Click here for video of all of the Princeton workshop panels.)

    Law.gov was discussed at Roundtable Number 4, “Gone Today, Here Tomorrow: Assuring Access to Government Information in the Digital Age” (scroll down) (click here for the abstract for the roundtable), held 4 February 2010 at 3:45 p.m., at iConference 2010 [the conference of iSchools], at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Graduate School of Library & Information Science, in Champaign, Illinois, USA. Click here for slides from the presentations (HT @freegovinfo).

    On February 24, 2010, a roundtable on Law.gov, with Tom Bruce and Carl Malamud, was held at Yale Law School, for members of the Yale Law School community. Click here for Nicholas Bramble’s post on the event.

    A workshop on the Law.gov Project, a U.S.-based law-related open government data effort, was held 25 February 2010, at Columbia University Law School, in New York, New York, USA. Speakers included Professor Timothy Wu, of Columbia University Law School; and Carl Malamud of Public.Resource.Org. Topics will include the accuracy and authenticity of digital legal information, and a proposed National Inventory of Primary Legal Materials (also called the National Inventory of Legal Materials). HT Stuart Sierra.

    Click here for information about the Colorado Law.gov Workshop, held 2 April 2010. Click here for video of the workshop.

    Click here for information about the Duke Law.gov Workshop, held 28 April 2010. Click here for video of the workshop at Internet Archive (scroll down), and click here for the video on YouTube.

    Click here for information about the Texas Law.gov Workshop, held 4 May 2010. Click here for video of the workshop.

    Click here for information about the Berkeley/SOMA Law.gov Workshop, held 12 May 2010. Click here for video of the workshop.

    Click here for information about the Chicago Law.gov Workshop, held 21 May 2010. Click here for video of the workshop. Click here for press coverage of the workshop.

    Click here for video of the Law.gov Event at the U.S. House of Representatives, held 25 May 2010.

    Click here for video of the first meeting of the Law.gov Core Specifications Task Force, held 26 May 2010.

    Click here for video of the Law.gov Workshop at the Center for American Progress, held 15 June 2010.

    Click here for video of the Harvard Law.gov Workshops, held 17-18 June 2010.

    Click here for information on upcoming Law.gov events.

    Other law-related Open Government Data efforts include the U.S. Government’s Open Government Directive, and the UK Office of Public Sector Information (OPSI)’s Single Legislation Service (SLS) (see details from Dr. John L. Sheridan via Dr. Adam Wyner here and here).

    For more information about Law.gov, see posts by Joe Hodnicki and Erika Wayne, and the Law Librarian radio program about the project.

    [NOTE: This post was last updated 28 July 2010. Updated on 15 February 2010 to list upcoming events for February & March 2010. Updated on 14 February 2010 to add the Twitter hashtag for the Law.gov project: #lawgov. Updated on 9 February 2010 to mention the discussion of Law.gov at the 4 February 2010 roundtable, “Gone Today, Here Tomorrow: Assuring Access to Government Information in the Digital Age,” at the 2010 iConference. Updated on 2 February 2010 to link to the Law.gov Project Google Group. Updated on 27 January 2010 to link to video and a summary of the Law.gov panel at the Princeton Open Government Workshop. Updated on 25 January 2010 to link to news about the National Inventory of Legal Materials. Updated on 23 January 2010 to link to video of the January 12 Stanford panel. HT @evwayne.]

    [NOTE: Updated on 16 January 2010 to mention the Law Library of Congress's statements about its relationship with the Law.gov project, and the National Inventory of Legal Materials (also called the National Inventory of Primary Legal Materials). Updated on 12 January 2010 to mention the 25 February Law.gov Workshop at Columbia University Law School. Updated on 6 January 2010 to mention the 12 January Law.gov event at Stanford Law School.]


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