@LOLSCOTUS doesn't tweet in real-time, per se. It begins tweeting as soon as Supreme Court oral argument transcripts are released, noting each time "(Laughter.)" appears in the transcripts.[From Lockhart v. United States]Each of the tweets links out to the transcript and the page.It's convenient and digestible way to find out how many times SCOTUS laughed during oral argument over a death penalty case. (Answer: way more than you'd care to know, tbh.)2) congress-editorsLockhart v. United States LOL p. 39 line 17 https://t.co/9HKyrtSsHI
— LOL SCOTUS (@LOLSCOTUS) November 3, 2015
@congresseditors tweets every time someone edits a Wikipedia article about Congressional legislation or a member of the United States Congress. Each tweet contains the name of the article, the name of the editor, and a link to the "Difference between revisions" page.3) congress-editsTed Cruz Wikipedia article edited by Anonymous https://t.co/lNov6RPLs6
— congress-editors (@congresseditors) November 3, 2015
Talk:Chelsea Manning Wikipedia article edited anonymously from US House of Representatives http://t.co/wl6ugp7i2Z
— congress-edits (@congressedits) August 5, 2014
Sometimes the Supreme Court of the United States reuploads copies of its decisions, and @scotus_servo is there to catch it. Sometimes its tweets are false alarms, but every now and then it catches an honest-to-god typo, in case you're one of those people who actually cares that SCOTUS accidentally a word now and then.POSSIBLE CHANGE ALERT in Zivotofsky v. Kerry (before https://t.co/rFGE8IXvTV & after http://t.co/rM5lYaTqX6)
— SCOTUS Servo (@SCOTUS_servo) June 10, 2015
5) FISA CourtChange Confirmed! "that that" is now "that". I guess that that happens every now and then. pic.twitter.com/JmXIOm0VO8
— SCOTUS Servo (@SCOTUS_servo) June 11, 2015
@FISACourt has an awfully official sounding Twitter name, but it's actually a bot that tweets updates from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) docket. The bot joined Twitter in June 2013, the same month of the Snowden revelations, just as public interest in FISC rose to a level it never had before.The Court granted another 3-month request for bulk telephone metadata, this time under USA Freedom Act standards: http://t.co/aFucQun6gr
— FISA Court (@FISACourt) August 29, 2015