- In France, not only our law are versioned.
It's formally proved too!
https://catala-lang.org/
*Edit*: Woah ! The French crew is here. We are at least 5 quoting a variation of <https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/> for versioning.
by enriquelop
13 subcomments
- I built a pipeline that converts all Spanish state legislation into version-controlled Markdown. Each law is a file, each reform is a real git commit with the historical date. 8,642 laws, 27,866 commits.
The idea: legislation is just patches on patches on patches. Git already solves this. Instead of reading "strike paragraph 3 and replace with...", you get an actual diff.
The repo is the product. Browse any law, git log to see its full reform history, git diff to see exactly what changed.
Built the pipeline in ~4 hours with Claude Code. Source is BOE (Spain's official gazette) consolidated legislation API.
Exploring whether there's a business here — structured legislation API for legaltech/compliance, or just a useful open dataset. Curious what HN would build with this data.
- I love it. This is a step in the right direction to have a transparent database of existing laws and be able to consult them with your AI or anything capable to reason about them and explain the status quo of our national laws. I would love to see a similar setup for other countries.
- It would have been cool if the commit authors reflected the actual politicians responsible for the reforms.
Find a law, run `git blame` and immediately know who’s responsible for it
- Nice! I was just implementing this for CA state bills.
Is the parsing/uploading code shared somewhere else?
Definitely the kind of idea that would have been below my activation energy pre-Claude.
I think this approach should be standard, I have always wondered why the source of truth for these documents is not moved to a repo like git.
- This is brilliant. I wish this were available for all legislations. There's so many inefficiencies that are trivially solved with existing tech frameworks.
- Great project.
For others wondering, while most of the Franco-era laws were nuked in 1978, this does include lots of old laws (ie pre-20th C).
However, the source material starts with a sqashed commit in 1960 :) So no changelog before that. The BOE source though is pretty phenomonal, they've scanned files going back to the 1600s so far.
by cyrusradfar
5 subcomments
- I think this is great. Only limit of git is I can't imagine "git blame" works. It would be nice to know who voted for and against each patch. Git isn't structured for collaborative commits.
- Not only would be cool for laws to have appropiate time stamps so we can "go back in time to how it was at a certain moment", but also if we could have proper git commit diffs of how laws change over time. See this: https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-2015-11430
You can see how certain articles have the option to check "how that particular article was at each moment in time". That would be way harder to track, but it would be awesome if not only could you "go back in time and see what the law was" but also "how its been evolving".
- I did the same with a limited subset of dutch laws a while back: https://github.com/sigio?tab=repositories&q=wetboek
by vitorbaptistaa
1 subcomments
- Congratulations! This is a very cool project. A few years ago there were similar ones -- browse gitlaw.
In Brazil we have lexml, a standard to describe the law and their changes over time. It's surprisingly complex.
by matthewgard1
0 subcomment
- I did something very similar for some US state level laws. "Legit" legislative git.
Useful for alerts in our concern area, and monitoring proposed legislation iteration and flow through committees to keep ahead.
I can imagine quite a few other more civic interest uses as well!
Hoping to open source some later myself, seems an area ripe for some open civic citizen/hacker projects. Bet some fun startups could be made on top too, gl.
by pilingual
2 subcomments
- One idea behind the PoC Right to Privacy Act is having tests. A recurring theme with conservative Justices is clarity of legal text.
Testing may not exhaust all scenarios but it is useful to see where loopholes may exist or whether a bill that sneaks in while you aren't paying attention is unfavorable to your values.
https://github.com/righttoprivacyact/bill/blob/main/tests/te...
- Nobody seems to have (yet) mentioned the most recent (rn) commit [1] dated 2099.
I can't really figure out where the date came from, at the source noted in the commit I find no '2099', I can't see it being a joke, if it's a bug it's not obvious to me..
I'm sure I won't be the only one curious, please enlighten me.
[1]: <https://github.com/EnriqueLop/legalize-es/commit/424cbc96507...>
- Well done. I believe that Governments should have a Open Licence for copyright purposes like exists in the UK that allows Govt docs to be used for commercial purposes without issue. I would want to propose a step forward there so that the next generation of this open licence actually has a data set approach to making data sets available - possibly at cost. Governments are losing the ability to charge for nominal items in paper as digital is so openly available - they can make a revenue on providing data at large to public so that others can build or simply if not for free.
Well done and great to see items like this and great to see the comments.
- Add CI to check if new laws don't contradict with any existing ones.
- Nice, I am going to this for Swedish law!
Any suggestions on how one can model parliament voting when a law passes using GitHub? Or all the work that preceded a law, that’s like a feature request or a bug report.
by MinimalAction
2 subcomments
- The general sentiment here is that it's a great project. Could someone please explain why? All I'm seeing is that laws are updated with commits within markdown files.
by boredatoms
2 subcomments
- Is there something like this for the US?
- A couple things I noticed opening one random page (https://github.com/EnriqueLop/legalize-es/blob/master/spain/...)
It left out the tables (e.g. under 2.1 Materiales.) and the images (e.g see the very bottom).
by sebastianconcpt
0 subcomment
- We need something like this for every country.
- Looks like we're heading toward some resolution to the old problem 'ignorance of the law is no excuse'. Born in a world with plenty of laws, the jeopardy that goes with them, and no easy and reliable resources, that would certainly be welcome.
by dorianmariecom
1 subcomments
- for france there is https://www.lafabriquedelaloi.fr/
by wouldbecouldbe
1 subcomments
- This is really great, anyone know of a Dutch version?
- This is a key project, and I’m sure many countries have enough developers who might try and get it done, but a project that can do it for most legal systems (assuming the sources are on-line) would help a lot more people access legal resources.
by notorandit
0 subcomment
- That's how it should be everywhere!
by coopykins
1 subcomments
- Hey, very nice! Seems like a great way to have LLMs answer questions about the laws more reliably.
- Neat. I wonder if there are commercial products that are formal specifications of laws, decisions, etc. Such that you can reason on them via solvers etc.
by reality_inspctr
0 subcomment
- love this. I did something similar w the US Constitution. https://usconstitutionapi.com/
by throwaway_2626
0 subcomment
- This is amazing. I have a couple of suggestions:
- Maybe breaking the "Spain" folder into subfolders? Not sure what categories could be used, but browsing would be easier.
- There's a missed opportunity in having different authors for the commits (maybe the "legislatura" number), and possibly, tags/labels including the political parties that voted in favor of each.
I'll take a look at data to enrich it :).
by larsiusprime
1 subcomments
- Is the idea that the commits themselves are also time stamped with the date of the legislation/amendment too?
- Did you try more heading levels for the article names?
- I wonder which country will be the first to be run entirely by AI instead of corrupt politicians
- This is great. Compare it to British legislation which is frankly a mess of patches. Example picked fairly much at random, this law was originally passed in 1990 and has been "patched" regularly:
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1990/18/section/9
Laws being passed are these ludicrous sets of patches:
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2015/9/part/1
by SweetSoftPillow
0 subcomment
- We need it for every country and every law in the history of humanity
by Ericson2314
0 subcomment
- All legislatures need to work this way as soon as possible!
- I love this. This made me think that logging all legislation in a public VCS might be a very good way to leverage superintelligence while maintaining democracy. I want this for Germany.
by ivanjermakov
6 subcomments
- I'm surprised the world is not running a system where laws are formally encoded using some DSL that would allow making decision (guilty/not guilty) using formal logic. Perhaps there is not much interest from law making/enforcing parties for this either.
- I think French laws have been on website that’s like that for a while
- The date of the last commit is 2099.
by MomsAVoxell
1 subcomments
- Great idea! I hope you did something like:
$ git commit --amend --author="Author Name <author@spanish.gov>" --no-edit
.. with the details for the author of each commit.Then, it would be simply amazing to run gource, sit back, and watch where all the noise is coming from.
Gource:
https://github.com/acaudwell/gource
What gource looks like:
https://gource.io/
I’ve long wanted to see gource applied in other sociologically-relevant contexts and this’d be a real good one ..
- I've been saying for years that any and all legal documents (and all lawyers) should be required to be on/use git
- Good Idea!
by AtomicOrbital
0 subcomment
- all of government data including all laws especially tax law needs to be put online and optimized by ML
- Nice
- law.py — A Distributed Legislature:
https://gist.githubusercontent.com/float64co/deb887691f13dee...
- I've seen something like this before, here's the Argentina constitution as a git repo, with reforms as commits. Much shorter in scope, but this was pre LLM coding
P.S: Sadly my PR amendment was repealled
by adjejmxbdjdn
0 subcomment
- Love this idea
by devnotes77
0 subcomment
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by techsystems
0 subcomment
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by peterhadlaw
5 subcomments
- Does it include the law that made it okay for Noelia Castillo to commit suicide the other day?