Federal court documents are currently made available to the public through a crufty system called PACER. For eight cents per page, users can download filings and other relevant documents associated with individual cases. PACER is intended to open case law and court activity to broad public scrutiny, but the system’s obfuscated design and its paywall significantly undermine its efficacy.
The content hosted on PACER can be freely redistributed by third parties because copyright is not applicable to court documents, but the access fees make it costly and difficult for data archivers to assemble their own comprehensive mirrors that would offload the hosting burden and make the content more easily accessible to the general public. Princeton’s Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP) is launching a new project to tackle this problem.
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica – News









