joi, 24 octombrie 2013

Carver and Lissner: Free Law Virtual Machine

Professor Dr. Brian Carver of the University of California, Berkeley, and Michael Lissner , have announced the availability of Free Law Virtual Machine , a new set of tools from Free Law Project.


Here are excerpts of the announcement:



A goal of the Free Law Project is to make development of legal tools as easy as possible. In that vein, we’re excited to share that as of today we’re officially taking the wraps off what we’re calling the Free Law Virtual Machine.


For those not familiar with this, a virtual machine is a snapshot of a computer that can be run by anybody, anywhere. With this release, we’ve created a computer running Ubuntu Linux that our developers or academics can download, and which has all of the Free Law Project’s efforts pre-loaded and ready to go.


In addition to a number of minor improvements, the following are installed and configured:



  • Courtlistener

  • Juriscraper

  • Development tools such as Intellij, Meld, vim, and Kiki

  • Bookmarks of all American courts


In addition to providing a simple virtual machine that you can install, we’re also releasing sample data that can easily be imported into the CourtListener platform. This data is available in groups of 50, 500, 5,000 or 50,000 records so that anybody can easily begin working or experimenting with our platform.


If you’re interested in using the Free Law Virtual Machine, feel free to download and use it, and please get in touch in our developer forum. [...]



For more details, please see the complete announcement.


HT Legal Informatics subreddit




Filed under: Applications, Technology developments, Technology tools Tagged: Brian Carver, Court decisions, Court information systems, CourtListener, Free access to law, Free Law Project, Free Law Virtual Machine, Judicial decisions, Judicial information systems, Juriscraper, Legal informatics subreddit, Legal informatics virtual machines, Legal virtual machines, Michael Lissner, Open court data, Open judicial data, Open legal data, Public access to court decisions, Public access to judicial decisions, Public access to legal information, Viritual machines and legal information systems, Virtual machines for legal informatics



via Legal Informatics Blog http://legalinformatics.wordpress.com/2013/10/25/carver-and-lissner-free-law-virtual-machine/

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