Law.Data.gov Launches
BY Nancy Scola | Monday, March 14 2011
Also joining the federal open government website family today is Law.Data.gov. The site is, of course, a subdomain on the U.S. federal government's data clearinghouse site Data.gov. "Administrative decisions by agency heads, boards, and administrative law judges, as well as advisory opinions and legal interpretations by agency general counsels are distributed across various agency websites and can be difficult to discover for the general user," reads the site in explaining its reason for being. At launch, the site is hosting just more than 90 data sets -- though they're probably not what pops into your head when you hear the word "law," as the bulk of them are records from Defense Department hearings and the like.
For those of us who track this space closely, the launch of a "Law.Data.gov" is eye-catching in part because citizen activist Carl Malamud has been working along a similar track to bring together some internal and external consensus around creating easily accessible legal code and other documents, under the banner of Law.gov. For the moment at least, Malamud decline to comment on the White House's dropping of Law.Data.gov.