Friday, September 15, 2017
Friday, September 8, 2017
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
CTC-2017 News - Get Ready
Court Technology Conferences are an incredible deal. Many other tech conferences cost $1,500 or more. When we make this post, there are less than two days to register for the conference at the regular rate. CTC is the event of the year, some highlights below.
Friday, August 25, 2017
Monday, August 14, 2017
Judge Michael Marcus – The Passing of a Court Tech Pioneer
Hon. Michael Marcus |
Last month we were saddened to hear of the passing of Judge Michael Marcus formerly of the Multnomah County (Portland, Oregon) Circuit Court. I had the great pleasure of knowing Michael since the late 1990’s because of his work in developing the concept of “Smart Sentencing”. A video of a presentation Judge Marcus made on his work from 2010 is available here.
Judge Marcus also wrote one of the most popular articles in the history of the Court Tech Bulletin about his "Search for a Quiet Keyboard” in 2007.
But back to the main subject below.
Thursday, August 10, 2017
This and That in Court Technology – August, 2017
https://goo.gl/PLWoi1 |
A big CTC-2017 promotion (especially if you are hungry), an upcoming JTC webinar, big E-filing news, Wyoming court automation fees introduced, space and cost savings by the US Federal Courts, and a little tip in this month’s court tech news amalgamation.
Thursday, August 3, 2017
Blockchain for Criminal Charge Tracking?
https://goo.gl/qv8unC |
A recent question to the NCSC Community bulletin board regarding Blockchain technology led to the following thoughts regarding its potential use in one of the most difficult problems we have faced in the justice community since the 1970’s, criminal charge tracking. We discuss below.
Thursday, July 27, 2017
NCSC Releases New Report on Court Privacy Policy
A State Justice Institute supported report, “Best Practices for Court Privacy Policy Formulation” authored by three of our NCSC colleagues, Tom Clarke, Jannet Lewis and Di Graski has just been released. The report begins:
"As state and local courts progressively convert their business processes from paper to electronic formats, policies around remote electronic access to court case information by the public become ever more important. COSCA last addressed this issue comprehensively in 2002 with a report authored by Martha Steketee and Alan Carlson that proposed a model policy for public access. At that time, few courts had implemented electronic filing, so the model policy addressed both manual and electronic access. In the fifteen years since then, courts have learned a lot about living in an electronic world and providing remote access to their case data and documents. Consequently, there is a need to update what we know about this topic and revise the model policy."
August 31, 2017 revision -- click here to access the updated paper.
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Cobb County Georgia Issues Court Tech RFI
Cobb County (“County”) invites qualified technology companies (“Responders”) to submit written information about their ability to provide the modules needed to support countywide court and justice partner operations and case management with the goal of providing better access to justice and improving internal efficiencies.
Friday, July 14, 2017
This and That in Court Technology – July, 2017
Library of Congress Exhibition Image |
This month's news about court technology and related topics includes CTC 2017 Experts, a proposed American Bar Association resolution, 10 tips for IT administrators to deal with password lockout, Margaret Hagan's artwork and observations from the NACM/IACA conference, the Center for Court Innovation's treatment courts online training offerings, the IJIS Institute announces a new Executive Director, and the Library of Congress exhibition, "Drawing Justice: The Art of Courtroom Illustration".
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