Sick of Microsoft and Google?

ZDNET – “…This new European office suite is a private, open-source alternative…Built primarily on the EU-based, open-source Nextcloud Hub, Office.eu bundles file storage and sharing, email, calendar, online document editing, and chat plus video calls into a single, browser‑based platform. The service deliberately mimics the look and feel of Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace to …

Subjects: E-Mail, E-Records, Internet, Knowledge Management

Websites change. Perma Links don’t.

Perma.cc helps scholars, journals, courts, and others create permanent records of the web sources they cite. Perma.cc is simple, easy to use, and is built and supported by libraries. One good reason to use Perma.cc? How about 404? – Websites change, go away, and get taken down. When linked citations lead to broken, blank, altered, …

Subjects: Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Libraries, Search Engines

Wikilinker

Wikilinker – Auto-links the most popular 1,000,000 people, places, organizations, and other matchable names to their Wikipedia pages on any webpage, using a bloom filter for compact name lookup. Browser extension – The best way to use Wikilinker is with the browser extension for Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. It works on any website, runs entirely …

Subjects: Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Search Engines

Pentagon Should Focus on Defense Priorities After Historic $93.4B “Use-It-or-Lose-It”

Open the Books – “Defense officials typically enter the end of each fiscal year with at least one goal in mind: spend the rest of the military’s budget by any means necessary. Otherwise, “use-it-or-lose-it” funding rules force the Pentagon to forfeit its unused money and potentially see reduced funding next year. Open the Books has …

Subjects: Defense, E-Records, Government Documents, Legal Research, Privacy

Credit Bureaus Are Leaving More Mistakes on Frustrated Consumers’ Reports Under Trump’s CFPB

ProPublica: “…The timing of the drops at TransUnion and Experian coincides with the Trump administration’s dismantling of the CFPB. In February 2025, Russell Vought, a White House official who oversaw sweeping cuts across federal agencies, took control of the CFPB as acting director. He quickly ordered a stop to  nearly all agency work. Under his …

Subjects: Congress, Economy, Financial System, Government Documents, Legal Research

Much of the government’s technology isn’t accessible, internal report finds

NextGov/FCW: “Nearly 30 years after Congress put accessibility requirements for government technology into law, much of the federal government’s technology still isn’t fully meeting accessibility standards.  Less than 40% of the government’s most-viewed public webpages are fully accessible, according to a new report by the General Services Administration.  Overall, the federal government’s technology, including internal …

Subjects: E-Records, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines

CRS U.S. Military Operations Against Iran’s Missile and Nuclear Programs

U.S. Military Operations Against Iran’s Missile and Nuclear Programs – P.L.111-84; P.L.119-60 – Publication Date: 03/06/2026. On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched military operations against Iran. The same day, President Donald J. Trump listed among the operation’s objectives preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, destroying Iran’s missiles, and “[razing] their …

Subjects: Defense, Government Documents, Legal Research

CITR Challenges US Government Censorship Policy

CITR Challenges US Government Censorship Policy Threatening Deportation for Work on Social Media Platforms and Online Harms – The Coalition for Independent Technology Research filed a lawsuit today in partnership with the Knight First Amendment Institute and Protect Democracy, challenging the US government’s Censorship Policy that unconstitutionally targets noncitizen researchers, fact-checkers, and trust and safety workers for …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Free Speech, Freedom of Information, Legal Research, Social Media

DOGE employee stole Social Security data – put it on a thumb drive

TechCrunch: “A former employee of Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency reportedly stole Americans’ personal data from the U.S. Social Security Administration and stored it on a thumb drive, according to a whistleblower complaint reported by The Washington Post. The former DOGE software engineer told co-workers at his new job that he “possessed two tightly …

Subjects: E-Government, E-Records, Government Documents, Internet, Legal Research, Privacy

Amazon wins court order to block Perplexity’s AI shopping agent

CNBC: “A federal judge temporarily blocked startup Perplexity from accessing Amazon’s site with its Comet artificial intelligence browser, according to court filings. Amazon sued Perplexity in November, alleging the startup took steps to “conceal” its AI agents so they could continue to scrape the online retailer’s website without its approval. Perplexity called the lawsuit, which …

Subjects: AI, Courts, E-Commerce, Legal Research

The Most Dangerous Branch – Liberty and the presidency

“Jack Goldsmith [Executive Functions] speaks with Cass Sunstein, the Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard Law School, about his new book, Separation of Powers: How to Preserve Liberty in Troubled Times. They discuss why the executive is the most dangerous branch of government, the importance of responsible executive branch lawyers, and contemporary debates over the …

Subjects: Congress, Courts, Education, Legal Research, Recommended Books