zlacker

[return to "GitLaw: GitHub For Laws And Legal Documents - A Tourniquet For American Liberty"]
1. jph+9c[view] [source] 2012-05-13 23:01:02
>>waffle+(OP)
Hypothes.is is great for this -- see http://hypothes.is.

"A distributed, open-source platform for the collaborative evaluation of information. It will enable sentence-level critique of written words combined with a sophisticated yet easy-to-use model of community peer-review. It will work as an overlay on top of any stable content, including news, blogs, scientific articles, books, terms of service, ballot initiatives, legislation and regulations, software code and more-without requiring participation of the underlying site.

"It is based on a new draft standard for annotating digital documents currently being developed by the Open Annotation Collaboration, a consortium that includes the Internet Archive, NISO (National Information Standards Organization), O'Reilly Books, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and a number of academic institutions.

◧◩
2. neilk+Ar[view] [source] 2012-05-14 05:36:10
>>jph+9c
I don't see how hypothes.is has anything to do with this... that project seems to be about annotating any content. (And incidentally, universal annotation systems are paradigmatic chicken and egg problem; people keep trying to do this and it never reaches broad adoption).

Github for law is a much more modest and realizable idea, by comparison.

[go to top]