duminică, 11 mai 2014

DC Code Reunion Hackathon, May 10, 2014, Washington, DC

The DC Code Reunion Hackathon is being held May 10, 2014, at Mapbox Garage in Washington, DC, USA.


Here is a description of the event, from the registration page:



In 2013, @tmcw organized a killer hackathon for the DC Code. At the hackathon, a new DC Code browser was built and a new era in open legal data in DC was born. A year later, much has happened, but more needs to be done.


To see what’s been done: http://dccode.org/


For a hackpad of projects: http://ift.tt/1isiHqi [...]



One of the Twitter hashtags for the event is #legalhack


Tom MacWright has a new post describing some of the projects to be worked on at the hackathon: DC Code Hackathon: v2 .


Here are excerpts from the post:



[...] Legal authentication


The original dccode viewer is unofficial for several reasons: it’s not hosted by the DC Government, it doesn’t follow government accessibility regulations, and it isn’t authenticated. Authentication is a process in which the government tries to guarantee that the law you’re reading hasn’t been tampered with. [...]


What is built so far is the skeleton of a Django app that will aim to be a sort of key server, called authentication. [...]


Citations


Laws [...] refer to themselves all the time, via citations [...]. Extracting these is a neat and hard problem, but key to fulfilling the central coolness of the internet: hyperlinks.


What is built so far is a node module called citation that pulls in modules of regular expressions that support specific citation styles. [...]


Editing the code online


The drafting process for any official document is usually the same or worse than your office [...]. Creating an editor where revisions to the law could stay online would make the process better for everyone and reduce the friction for lawmakers to draft laws with public input.


What is built so far is a node app that provides an editing interface built with CodeMirror. [...]


A Legal Format


Standardizing a representation of anything is hard. Two well-known drafts exist: Akoma Ntoso and United States Legislative Markup. But there’s still a long way to go to find the right balance between terse and explanatory markup, between developer ease and producer consistency.


So far Josh [Tauberer] has prototyped a format that powers the editor and display tech. [...]



For more details, please see Tom’s complete post and the hackathon registration page.


HT @DCLegalHackers




Filed under: Applications, Conference Announcements, Hackathons, Hacking, Software, Technology developments, Technology tools Tagged: #LegalHack, AKOMA NTOSO, DC Code, DC Code Browser, DC Code Hackathon, DC Code Reunion Hackathon, DC Legal Hackers, Eric Mill, Joshua Tauberer, Legal hackathons, Legislative hackathons, Legislative information systems, Open DC Code Browser, Open DC Code Hackathon, the unitedstates project, theunitedstates.io, Tom MacWright, United States Legislative Markup, V. David Zvenyach



via Legal Informatics Blog http://ift.tt/SRnF6O

Niciun comentariu:

Trimiteți un comentariu