No Free PACER as US Lawmakers Exclude Proposal from Spending Bill (reuters.com) 27
U.S. lawmakers have left a proposal to make the federal judiciary's PACER online court records system free out of a sprawling, $1.66 trillion spending measure unveiled on Tuesday, a setback for advocates as the current Congress nears its end. From a report: Supporters of the Open Courts Act had been pushing to get the stalled, bipartisan legislation attached to the omnibus spending measure, which boosts overall spending on the judiciary by nearly 6% to $8.461 billion in fiscal year 2023. Currently, users of PACER, which stands for Public Access to Court Electronic Records, are charged $0.10 per page to download documents up to a $3 cap, which does not cover transcripts. The Open Courts Act would make electronic court records freely available and mandate the judiciary to develop a new website to access them. It had already advanced out of the Senate Judiciary Committee on a bipartisan vote in December 2021.
Acronyms (Score:1, Troll)
"which stands for Public Access to Court Electronic Records"
Shouldn't that be PATCER
Re:Acronyms (Score:4, Informative)
Wow, a $3 cap? (Score:2)
This will not stand...
Somehow I doubt you're gonna find much of anyone who cares. On the face of it, anyway, this sounds like some court harasser's boutique cause.
Re:Wow, a $3 cap? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes and no. The government really SHOULD create a modern website to distribute this stuff to the citizens for free.
The old system made sense when printed documents were involved.
The current system is like if comcast still charged you telegram pricing or USPS first class letter pricing to send an email. It's absurd even if its pretty cheap.
The only reason PACER hasn't been updated is literally because there is no competition pressure and it takes an act of congress to make a change.
Its the right thing to do.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
There are a lot of entities who care. $3 may not sound like much but there are a lot of companies who access this information across a lot of different fields and incur a massive cost from doing so. But what world does $0.10 per page make a lick of sense when it's all 100% electronic and you don't have some court clerk digging through records to scan something (like the old days)? It's long past time for the old "back when this was all paper we did it this way" days to go away.
Re: (Score:2)
PACER (Score:4, Informative)
This might be a place to mention them. Only one person has to pay.
Re:PACER (Score:5, Informative)
I think you mean RECAP [free.law]
Re: (Score:2)
you are correct, AM brain reversed it too many times.
Re: (Score:2)
One of the few things that ought to be free (Score:3)
Fortunately there's a very good technical solution to this that would make it rather inexpensive to implement. Just use torrents and let the people share it. Large law firms would want to keep a lot of the files on hand and universities and libraries could also serve as repositories for large amounts of the data. You'd get plenty of my sort who'd gladly maintain personal copies as well.
Perhaps after the rousing success we can do the same with all of the taxpayer funded research that's wound up in various journals or conference proceedings as well.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
The Biden Administration issued an order a few months ago requiring that all papers and related data for research funded by the government must be made available online for free no later than Jan 1, 2026, with the papers and data going up simultaneously with the peer-reviewed manuscript. Agencies have until the end of 2024 to create their policies and the end of 2025 to implement them.
https://www.science.org/conten... [science.org]
Re: (Score:1)
Re: One of the few things that ought to be free (Score:2)
Because you can reliably connect the name "John Smith" in a court document to a random individual called "John Smith". Oh you can't so it would be a worthless exercise to scrape it.
Re: One of the few things that ought to be free (Score:2)
Quarterly minimum... (Score:3)
If you don't use more than $15 in a quarter, the fee is waived.
So if you just wanna look up one case or whatever, it's not a big deal.
But 10 cents a page is outrageous in 2022 for an online doc system.
Re: (Score:1)
not the free pacers (Score:1)
oh no no more free mechanical pencils!!!
Ugly Car (Score:3)
I doubt you could give away a Pacer to the hardest up person in need of a car. That thing was so ugly no one wants to even restore one.
10c protection (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Everything Privitized is a Problem for Poor People (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)