From 7c7f442706d44a2eb5ef72c9f8953b1851b91ae7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: R I B Z Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2024 13:56:57 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] removing mentions of correcting data, removing mentions of access restrictions --- src/templates/cap-about-page.js | 36 --------------------------------- 1 file changed, 36 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/templates/cap-about-page.js b/src/templates/cap-about-page.js index 5260f40..67c9bc0 100644 --- a/src/templates/cap-about-page.js +++ b/src/templates/cap-about-page.js @@ -155,18 +155,6 @@ export class CapAboutPage extends LitElement { Case text and general head matter has been generated by machine OCR and has not received human review.

-

- You can report errors of all kinds at our - contact form, or view existing - issues at our - Github issue tracker. We particularly welcome volume-level metadata corrections, - feature requests, and suggestions for large-scale algorithmic - changes. We are not currently able to process individual OCR - corrections, but welcome general suggestions on the OCR correction - process. -

Data citation

Data made available through the Caselaw Access Project API and bulk @@ -200,30 +188,6 @@ export class CapAboutPage extends LitElement { The CAP data is free for the public to use and access.

-

- Case metadata, such as the case name, citation, court, date, etc., - is freely and openly accessible without limitation. Full case text - can be freely viewed or downloaded but you must register for an - account to do so, and currently you may view or download no more - than 500 cases per day. In addition, research scholars can qualify - for bulk data access by agreeing to certain use and redistribution - restrictions. You can request a bulk access agreement by creating an - account and then visiting your account page. -

-

- Access limitations on full text and bulk data are a component of - Harvard’s collaboration agreement with Ravel Law, Inc. (now part of - Lexis-Nexis). These limitations will end, at the latest, in February - of 2024. In addition, these limitations apply only to cases from - jurisdictions that continue to publish their official case law in - print form. Once a jurisdiction transitions from print-first - publishing to digital-first publishing, these limitations cease. - Thus far, Illinois, Arkansas, New Mexico, and North Carolina have - made this important and positive shift and, as a result, all - historical cases from these jurisdictions are freely available to - the public without restriction. We hope many other jurisdictions - will follow their example soon. -

Press