An Effort to Define the Ideal "Law.gov"
A group of academics has been convened by Public.Resource.Org in order to define recommendations for a proposed federal government site: law.gov. The group will study the feasibility of creating the equivalent of a data.gov for legal materials. The process will define a concrete path forward forward for the government. Specifically, it will deliver:
- Detailed technical specifications for markup, authentication, bulk access, and other aspects of a distributed registry.
- A bill of lading defining which materials should be made available on the system.
- A detailed business plan and budget for the organization in the government running the new system.
- Sample enabling legislation.
- An economic impact statement detailing the effect on federal spending and economic activity.
- Procedures for auditing materials on the system to ensure authenticity.
Ed Felten, Executive Director of Princeton's Center for Information Technology Policy (which also produced RECAP), is one of the co-conveners.