AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR TESTING AND MATERIALS et al v. PUBLIC.RESOURCE.ORG, INC.
Filing
204
LARGE ADDITIONAL ATTACHMENT(S) to Public Resource's Second Motion for Summary Judgment by PUBLIC.RESOURCE.ORG, INC. 202 MOTION for Summary Judgment filed by PUBLIC.RESOURCE.ORG, INC., 203 SEALED MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE DOCUMENT UNDER SEAL filed by PUBLIC.RESOURCE.ORG, INC. (This document is SEALED and only available to authorized persons.) filed by PUBLIC.RESOURCE.ORG, INC.. (Attachments: # 1 Public Resources Statement of Disputed Facts, # 2 Public Resources Evidentiary Objections, # 3 Public Resources Request for Judicial Notice, # 4 Declaration Carl Malamud, # 5 Declaration Matthew Becker, # 6 Consolidated Index of Exhibits, # 7 Exhibit 1, # 8 Exhibit 2, # 9 Exhibit 3, # 10 Exhibit 4, # 11 Exhibit 5, # 12 Exhibit 6, # 13 Exhibit 7, # 14 Exhibit 8, # 15 Exhibit 9, # 16 Exhibit 10, # 17 Exhibit 11, # 18 Exhibit 12, # 19 Exhibit 13, # 20 Exhibit 14, # 21 Exhibit 15, # 22 Exhibit 16, # 23 Exhibit 17, # 24 Exhibit 18, # 25 Exhibit 19, # 26 Exhibit 20, # 27 Exhibit 21, # 28 Exhibit 22, # 29 Exhibit 23, # 30 Exhibit 24, # 31 Exhibit 25, # 32 Exhibit 26, # 33 Exhibit 27, # 34 Exhibit 28, # 35 Exhibit 29, # 36 Exhibit 30, # 37 Exhibit 31, # 38 Exhibit 32, # 39 Exhibit 33, # 40 Exhibit 34, # 41 Exhibit 35, # 42 Exhibit 36, # 43 Exhibit 37, # 44 Exhibit 38, # 45 Exhibit 39, # 46 Exhibit 40, # 47 Exhibit 41, # 48 Exhibit 42, # 49 Exhibit 43, # 50 Exhibit 44, # 51 Exhibit 45, # 52 Exhibit 46, # 53 Exhibit 47, # 54 Exhibit 48, # 55 Exhibit 49, # 56 Exhibit 50, # 57 Exhibit 51, # 58 Exhibit 52, # 59 Exhibit 53, # 60 Exhibit 54, # 61 Exhibit 55, # 62 Exhibit 56, # 63 Exhibit 57, # 64 Exhibit 58, # 65 Exhibit 59, # 66 Exhibit 60, # 67 Exhibit 61, # 68 Exhibit 62, # 69 Exhibit 63, # 70 Exhibit 64, # 71 Exhibit 65, # 72 Exhibit 66, # 73 Exhibit 67, # 74 Exhibit 68, # 75 Exhibit 69, # 76 Exhibit 70, # 77 Exhibit 71, # 78 Exhibit 72, # 79 Exhibit 73, # 80 Exhibit 74, # 81 Exhibit 75, # 82 Exhibit 76, # 83 Exhibit 77, # 84 Exhibit 78, # 85 Exhibit 79, # 86 Exhibit 80, # 87 Exhibit 81, # 88 Exhibit 82, # 89 Exhibit 83, # 90 Exhibit 84, # 91 Exhibit 85, # 92 Exhibit 86, # 93 Exhibit 87, # 94 Exhibit 88, # 95 Exhibit 89, # 96 Exhibit 90, # 97 Exhibit 91, # 98 Exhibit 92, # 99 Exhibit 93, # 100 Exhibit 94, # 101 Exhibit 95, # 102 Exhibit 96, # 103 Exhibit 97, # 104 Certificate of Service)(Bridges, Andrew)
EXHIBIT 31
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This is historical material “frozen in time”. The website is no longer updated and links to external websites and some internal pages may not
work.
Federal Register 2.0
JULY 26, 2010 AT 12:53 PM ET BY DAVID FERRIERO
Summary: On the 75th anniversary of the Federal Register, the National Archives
launches a new and improved FederalRegister.gov website.
Cross posted from the AOTUS blog.
Today, we are celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Federal Register Act by launching Federal
Register 2.0. In a special event in the Rotunda of the National Archives, I was joined by the Public
Printer of the United States and distinguished guests from regulatory agencies and the open
government community to introduce the web 2.0 version of the daily Federal Register.
What is the Federal Register?
The Federal Register is the legal newspaper of the U.S. government and contains rules, proposed
rules, and public notices of federal agencies, as well Presidential documents. It’s an important, crucial
part of our democracy. The Office of the Federal Register is a component of the National Archives
and Records Administration.
Have you ever tried to find something in the Federal Register?
As you might expect, the Federal Register is dense and difficult to read whether in print or online as a
PDF. It’s also difficult to find what you’re looking for.
Federal Register 2.0 takes into consideration the 21st century user and turns the Federal Register
website into a daily web newspaper. The clear layout will have tools to help users find what they
need, comment on proposed rules, and share material relevant to their interests. In addition to
greatly improved navigation and search tools, the site will highlight the most popular and
newsworthy documents and feature each agency’s significant rules.
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The website www.federalregister.gov, is divided into broad communities including: business &
industry, environment, health & public welfare, money, science & technology, and world. Important
documents stay on each section “above the fold.” Those documents that are most viewed, emailed,
and cited appear in a “What’s Hot” feature.
The development of Federal Register 2.0 used XML data and open source code. The Office of the
Federal Register worked in partnership with the Government Printing Office and developers who had
already competed in the Sunlight Labs “Apps for America 2″ contest using Federal Register data.
In August 2009, Andrew Carpenter, Bob Burbach, and Dave Augustine banded together outside of
their work at WestEd Interactive in San Francisco to enter the contest using data available on
data.gov. Understanding the wealth of important information published every day in the Federal
Register, they used the raw data to develop GovPulse.us, which won second place in the contest. In
March 2010, the Office of the Federal Register approached the trio to repurpose, refine, and expand
on the GovPulse.us application to bring the Federal Register to a wider audience. Federal Register 2.0
is the product of this innovative partnership and was developed using the principles of open
government.
Federal Register 2.0 is an important part of the National Archives’ Open Government Plan, and it
harkens back to our historic role as an agency that helps maintain democracy itself.
The Federal Register Act of 1935 is now recognized as a landmark achievement in establishing a right
of public access to government information. Passage of the act ensured that legal issuances could no
longer be adopted in secret and arbitrarily enforced against the public. In later years, this system of
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open access to information was expanded and strengthened by the Administrative Procedure Act
and the Freedom of Information Act. This is how the mission of the National Archives came to be
integrally linked with the concepts of open government, fundamental fairness, and due process of
law.
Thomas Jefferson wrote, “whenever the people are well-informed, they can be trusted with their own
government.” Federal Register 2.0 enables citizens and communities to better understand the
regulatory process and participate in government decision-making. The National Archives and the
Office of the Federal Register are committed to enabling the free flow of information to foster
engaged and knowledgeable public discourse and collaboration.
Check out www.federalregister.gov and let us know what you think.
David Ferriero is Archivist of the United States
THE FINAL STATE OF THE UNION
THE SUPREME COURT
Watch President Obama's final State of the Union
Read what the President is looking for in his next
address.
Supreme Court nominee.
FIND YOUR PARK
Take a look at America's three newest national
monuments.
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