Twitter bots for good?

Most of the time when I see the word “bot” I think of Russian trolls influencing the U.S. election. But not this time! USA Today investigative reporter Brad Heath has created an automatic Twitter bot that follows selected U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Courts of Appeal, and Federal District Court cases of note and posts documents from new docket entries to Twitter.

In its documentation, the bot is described as follows:

The bot uses PACER RSS feeds to gather the latest filings from 74 U.S. District Courts and five federal courts of appeals and stores the docket entries in a database. It matches new filings against a preselected list of major cases, scrapes matching documents from PACER, uploads them to a DocumentCloud project and posts the results on Twitter.

You must have a PACER account in order to access the documents – we do! So if you want the latest filing on United States v. AT&T and Time Warner, or any other U.S. court case you’re watching, let us know if we can help. There may be a fee for retrieving documents.

And follow Big Cases on Twitter for up-to-date notification.

h/t to Internet for Lawyers.

 

Manitoba eLaw – New Edition – Business Law Update

The latest edition of Business Law from Manitoba eLaw is now live! Some of the articles in Issue No. 82, March 2018 include:

  • “Something More Than Nothing” Required to Discharge Duty: SCC
  • BLA Does Not Apply to Contracts or Work Related to Hydro Project: MBQB
  • Oppression Remedy Not Suited to Addressing Family Dispute: MBQB
  • Legislative Update
  • Federal Budget 2018
  • Consultation on Modernizing The Builders’ Liens Act: MLRC
  • Consultation Paper on Reviewing AML and ATF Regimes: Department of Finance