Freeing America's Operating System

Creative Commons — Freeing America’s Operating System:

Last November Carl Malamud’s Public​.Resource​.Org announced an ini­tia­tive to free 1.8 mil­lion pages of U.S. case law, pub­lish­ing them online with no restric­tions on reuse.

Today the results of this ini­tia­tive are avail­able at http://​bulk​.resource​.org/​c​o​u​r​t​s​.​g​ov/.

From the press release (pdf):

Today’s release cov­ers all U.S. Supreme Court deci­sions and all Courts of Appeals deci­sions from 1950 on. The release is equiv­a­lent to 1,858 vol­umes of case law in book form, a stack of books 348 feet tall.

Also from the press release, David Boies says:

Practical access for all Americans to legal cases and mate­r­ial is essen­tial to the rule of law.  The Legal Commons is an impor­tant step in reduc­ing the bar­ri­ers to effec­tive rep­re­sen­ta­tion of aver­age cit­i­zens and pub­lic inter­est advocates.

Developers and resource providers are already pick­ing up on this:

The cases made avail­able to devel­op­ers today will be used through­out the Internet. For exam­ple, the AltLaw ser­vice from Columbia and Colorado Law Schools has announced they will incor­po­rate the infor­ma­tion in their free ser­vice. Creative Commons and Public​.Resource​.Org are donat­ing a copy of the data to the U.S. Courts and the Government Printing Office for their archives. A num­ber of com­mer­cial legal research providservices.

Interesting devel­op­ments in the legal research world! I just com­mented on the new “Public Library of Law” that’s doing some­thing sim­i­lar. And just to reit­er­ate, the “gold stan­dards” of legal research in the U.S. are Westlaw and LexisNexis, and both ser­vices are very expen­sive. More com­pe­ti­tion is a good thing, and an even bet­ter thing is to have free open/​public access to legal infor­ma­tion.

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