This article needs additional citations for
verification. (June 2009) |
THOMAS was the first online database of United States Congress legislative information. A project of the Library of Congress, it was launched in January 1995 at the inception of the 104th Congress and retired on July 5, 2016; it has been superseded by Congress.gov. [1]
The resource was a comprehensive, Internet-accessible source of information on the activities of Congress, including:
The database was named after Thomas Jefferson, who was the third President of the United States. [2] "THOMAS" was an acronym for "The House [of Representatives] Open Multimedia Access System". [3]
The website allowed users to share legislative information via several social networking sites, [4] and there were proposals for an application programming interface. [5]
The Library of Congress created the Markup of US Legislation in Akoma Ntoso challenge [6] in July 2013 to create representations of selected US bills using the most recent Akoma Ntoso standard within a couple months for a $5,000 prize, [7] and the Legislative XML Data Mapping challenge in September 2013 [8] to produce a data map for US bill XML and UK bill XML to the most recent Akoma Ntoso schema within a couple months for a $10,000 prize. [9]
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (June 2009) |
THOMAS was the first online database of United States Congress legislative information. A project of the Library of Congress, it was launched in January 1995 at the inception of the 104th Congress and retired on July 5, 2016; it has been superseded by Congress.gov. [1]
The resource was a comprehensive, Internet-accessible source of information on the activities of Congress, including:
The database was named after Thomas Jefferson, who was the third President of the United States. [2] "THOMAS" was an acronym for "The House [of Representatives] Open Multimedia Access System". [3]
The website allowed users to share legislative information via several social networking sites, [4] and there were proposals for an application programming interface. [5]
The Library of Congress created the Markup of US Legislation in Akoma Ntoso challenge [6] in July 2013 to create representations of selected US bills using the most recent Akoma Ntoso standard within a couple months for a $5,000 prize, [7] and the Legislative XML Data Mapping challenge in September 2013 [8] to produce a data map for US bill XML and UK bill XML to the most recent Akoma Ntoso schema within a couple months for a $10,000 prize. [9]