From August 29 to September 6, 2015, servers operated by the
United States Copyright Office, were down. For more than eight days, hundreds of
applicants had to jump through hoops to file a copyright.
The Copyright Office’s electronic filing system, known as
“eCO”, was taken offline “to accommodate a scheduled annual power outage to
allow routine maintenance by the Architect of the Capitol,”
according to the Office.
However, at the end of the blackout period,
the Library’s information technology office could not bring the servers back
online, along with several other Library managed government sites. The
electronic filing system was down
until the morning of
September 6th.
With eCO down, applicants looking to file copyrights had to
mail in paper applications. On a typical day, the Copyright Office process
about 1,200 and 1,300 applications through eCO,
according to figures from 2013. (
see also Pallante, Maria. "The Next Generation Copyright Office: What It Is and Why It Matters." Journal, Copyright Society of the U.S.A. (2014). p. 217). Accordingly, a nine-day e-filing
hiatus could have resulted in the delay of almost 12,000 copyright
applications. At $35 to $55 a pop for basic registration, this delay in e-filed
submission could have potentially cost the office between $420,000 and $660,000
in lost fees.
Adding to the woes of applicants is the difference in
application processing times— paper
applications can take as long as 13 months to fully process, where e-filed
applications average around eight months. Not to mention the increased cost of
filing on paper— applicants may have to shell out
$30-$50 more than they would
for registration through eCO.
This recent malfunction of the Copyright Office’s electronic
filing system highlights the risk associated with government managed data and
the crucial role of third parties in supplementing electronic government
services.
A
report
conducted last spring by the Government Accountability Office exposed several
shortcomings in the Library of Congress’ ability to manage its IT assets. These
assets include not only the Copyright Office data, but data from congress.gov
and other government run websites in its $119 trillion dollar IT portfolio.
Enter third party data providers. There are many online
services and data repositories that can provide users with the same data
available on government websites without IT problems and risks. For example,
Docket Alarm, a
legal research engine and analytics platform, allows users the access the
entire PACER database and view every published federal court docket. Instead of
relying on an outdated government-run website to deliver the latest data from
federal courts, you can rely on Docket Alarm and its suite of innovative legal
research tools.
In addition to federal
court cases, Docket Alarm is the only legal research company to offer users a
dedicated Patent Trial and Appeal Board search engine and analytics platform.
Sign up today at www.docketalarm.com.
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