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17 Aug 2010, 1:13 pm by legalinformatics
Harlan Yu of the Princeton University Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP) has posted Assessing PACER’s Access Barriers, on the CITP blog Freedom to Tinker. [read post]
8 Sep 2010, 8:12 am by legalinformatics
Filed under: Articles and papers, Conference papers, Interviews Tagged: Alex Howard, Fees for access to court records, Free access to law, Gov 2.0 Summit, Harlan Yu, Law.gov, PACER, Privacy in court records, Public access to legal information, RECAP [read post]
3 Aug 2010, 1:25 pm by legalinformatics
Stephen Schultze and Harlan Yu, both of the Princeton University Center for Information Technology Policy, today announced (here and here) the launching of The RECAP Archive, a new Web interface to RECAP, the free database of U.S. federal court documents. [read post]
9 Aug 2012, 9:45 pm by legalinformatics
Harlan Yu of the Princeton University Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP), and David G. [read post]
2 Mar 2012, 8:33 pm by legalinformatics
Harlan Yu of the Princeton University Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP), and David G. [read post]
16 Mar 2012, 5:38 am by Danielle Citron
 Harlan Yu of Princeton’s Center for Information Technology Policy and David Robinson of the Yale Information Society Project have done important work puzzling through the question of transparency, and the related concerns of privacy and civil engagement, in “open government” efforts. [read post]
8 Jun 2008, 7:15 am
Robinson, David, Yu, Harlan, Zeller, William P and Felten, Edward W, Government Data and the Invisible Hand (2008). [read post]
6 Jun 2008, 9:02 pm
  Not quite, but Ed Felten, David Robinson, Harlan Yu and Bill Zeller argue in their new paper, “Government Data and the Invisible Hand,”  that the government’s focus on creating and maintaining websites with pre-packaged reports and ready-to-digest data analysis is misguided. [read post]
6 Oct 2009, 9:46 pm by Jason
Today, Stephen Schultze and Harlan Yu from the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton, and two of the creators of the Recap project, presented Recap at Yale Law School. [read post]
25 Aug 2009, 5:46 pm
Wired.com – “The federal court system doesn't seem to like Harlan Yu and his fellow merry pranksters who made a tool to free court documents from an unwieldy computer system that has a nasty habit of charging 8 cents a page for public documents. [read post]
25 Aug 2009, 4:44 pm
The federal court system doesn’t seem to like Harlan Yu, or his fellow merry pranksters, who made a tool to free court documents from an unwieldy computer system that has a nasty habit of charging 8 cents a page for public documents. [read post]
10 Jan 2012, 8:02 pm by Steve Schultze
Harlan Yu and I recently wrote an article for XRDS Magazine entitled Using Software to Liberate U.S. [read post]
1 Mar 2010, 3:41 pm by Joe Calandrino
[This is the first post in a series on best practices for government datasets by Harlan Yu and me.] [read post]
3 Mar 2010, 8:33 pm by Joe Calandrino
[This is the third post in a series on best practices for government datasets by Harlan Yu and me. [read post]
11 Jan 2011, 8:15 pm by Jim Harper
I laughed out loud when I read the following line in Harlan Yu’s post, “Some Technical Clarifications About Do Not Track“: “[T]he Do Not Track header compels servers to cooperate, to proactively refrain from any attempts to track the user. [read post]
18 Feb 2010, 3:11 pm by TJ McIntyre
David Robinson and Harlan Yu have posted a superb series of posts on Freedom to Tinker (1,2,3) about tactics which might be used to identify anonymous internet posters, even in cases where IP addresses might not have been logged by the site which hosts the comment. [read post]
8 Mar 2010, 7:45 am by Joe Calandrino
[This is the fourth post in a series on best practices for government datasets by Harlan Yu and me. [read post]
2 Mar 2010, 6:45 am by Joe Calandrino
[This is the second post in a series on best practices for government datasets by Harlan Yu and me. [read post]