Since its acquisition in November 2015 by LexisNexis, Lex Machina has been using LexisNexis's collection of federal and
state docket data to expand its analytics platform -LSB-...]
When LexisNexis acquired the legal analytics platform Lex Machina in November 2015, the plan was to use LexisNexis's collection of federal and
state docket data to expand Lex Machina's analytics beyond its original area of intellectual property.
Since the acquisition, it has been using LexisNexis's collection of federal and
state docket data to expand into other practice areas.
Not exact matches
At some point in the future, Lex Machina will also expand into applying its analytics to
data from
state court
dockets.
Additional federal practice areas will come in 2017, after which Lex Machina will turn its attention to adding
data from
state dockets.
The
data set, available at this website, includes information on, among others, date, the target Member
State, the legal domain or subject matter (e.g., competition, environmental protection, free movement of goods), and the official
docket number given to the case by the European Court of Justice.
As the federal PACER system is upgraded and more and more
states put some or all
dockets in electronic form, more litigation
data will become available to analytics vendors.