Day archives: March 23rd, 2025

Introducing the Policy Commons 2025 Open Collection

The Policy Commons 2025 Open Collection is an initiative to rescue and preserve materials from government organizations facing the removal of public information and data—reports, blog posts, videos, and podcasts. Coherent will archive, assign permanent unique identifiers, and index the materials for discovery through Google Scholar and academic databases. Each item will be enriched with …

Subjects: Legal Research

Trump administration slashes division in charge of 26,000 US artworks

The Observer: “Last week, several workers in the art and preservation unit of the General Services Administration (GSA) were placed on leave before being informed that their offices and positions would soon be eliminated. According to reporting by the Washington Post, the action affected more than half of the division’s approximately three dozen staff members …

Subjects: Censorship, Education, Government Documents, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

The Data Hoarders Resisting Trump’s Purge

The New Yorker [no paywall]: “Can librarians and guerrilla archivists save the country’s files from DOGE? The deletions began shortly after Donald Trump took office. C.D.C. web pages on vaccines, H.I.V. prevention, and reproductive health went missing. Findings on bird-flu transmission vanished minutes after they appeared. The Census Bureau’s public repository went offline, then returned …

Subjects: Censorship, Climate Change, E-Government, E-Records, Education, Energy, Environmental Law, Government Documents, Health Care, Legal Research, Medicine

Were you fired by President Trump?

The Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, Democratic Staff, is surveying the impact of the Trump Administration’s mass firings of federal employees from science agencies. If you were terminated from your position since January 20, 2025, please fill out this brief survey. While anonymous submissions will be helpful to the Committee’s efforts, we encourage you …

Subjects: Congress, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Legal Research

Pete Recommends Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, March 22, 2025

Via LLRX – Pete Recommends Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, March 22, 2025 – Privacy and cybersecurity issues impact every aspect of our lives – home, work, travel, education, finance, health and medical records – to name but a few. On a weekly basis Pete Weiss highlights articles and information that focus on the increasingly …

Subjects: AI, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, E-Commerce, E-Records, Government Documents, ID Theft, Privacy, Search Engines

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Legislation

Multistate: Artificial Intelligence (AI) Legislation. “Lawmakers are increasingly addressing AI through legislation. As AI technologies have burst on the scene, state lawmakers have responded by addressing concerns with this ubiquitous technology through public policy. In 2023, we saw less than 200 bills introduced across state legislatures addressing the issue of AI. But that shifted in …

Subjects: AI, Government Documents, Legal Research, Legislation

The LibGen data set – what authors can do

Society of Authors: “Meta has used millions of pirated books to develop its AI programmes. Yesterday (20 March 2025), The Atlantic published a searchable database of over 7.5 million books and 81 million research papers. This data set, called Library Genesis or ‘LibGen’ for short, is full of pirated material, and all of it has …

Subjects: Copyright, Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Libraries