Several legal data projects were worked on at the 2013 New York Times Developers Hack Day, held 16 November 2013 in New York City.
Click here for a storify about those projects.
The Twitter hashtag for the event was #NYTDevs
Here are the legal data projects I was able to identify, with URLs where available:
- API for Docket Wrench , Sunlight Foundation‘s regulatory comment analysis tool
- Catobills, a Ruby wrapper to the Deepbills Project API, by Derek Willis
- New York Times Inside Congress bill pages
- New York Times Bill Explorer
- Know Your Representatives, a “Windows 8 app” that provides information about legislators, using data from APIs produced by Klout, the New York Public Library, and the Sunlight Foundation (HT @amit)
- Tweet the Press, which “uses Sunlight Foundation and Twitter APIs to let you interact with members of Congress” (HT @timesopen)
- SayWhat?, which “uses Sunlight API to look into what legislators say publicly about their bills” (HT @timesopen)
For more details, please see the storify.
HT @derekwillis
Filed under: Applications, Storify, Technology developments, Technology tools Tagged: #LegalHack, #NYTDevs, APIs for legal data, APIs for legislative data, Apps and legal information, Legal APIs, Legal apps, Legal hackathons, Legal hacking, Legal hacking events, Legislative APIs, Legislative apps, Legislative information systems, Legislative metadata, New York Times Developers Hack Day
via Legal Informatics Blog http://legalinformatics.wordpress.com/2013/11/17/legal-data-projects-at-2013-new-york-times-developers-hack-day/
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