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Platform · The record platform

Asgard

Asgard is where the record lives: browser-based storage, management, and secure access to every proceeding, with nothing to install or maintain on your servers.

What is Asgard?

Asgard is TheRecordXchange's browser-based platform for storing, managing, and securely accessing the court record. It runs on AWS and works with the recording systems courts already use.

The challenge

What managing the record looks like without Asgard.

The record lives on local machines

When proceedings sit on a single workstation or server, access is tied to one place and recovery depends on one piece of hardware.

Finding a proceeding takes too long

Without a single, searchable home for the record, locating one hearing means hunting across drives, folders, and systems.

Security and access are hard to prove

Courts need audited controls over who can reach the record. Maintaining that on home-grown systems is a constant cost.

How it works

One secure home for the record.

01

Browser-based access from any device

Reach the full record from chambers, the bench, or the clerk's office — no install, no single point of access.

02

Secure, audited control

Role-based access and an audit trail over the record, on infrastructure that is SOC 2 Type II certified.

03

Works with what courts already run

Vendor-agnostic by design, so courts modernize the record without replacing the recording hardware in the courtroom.

At a glance
SOC 2 Type II
Independently certified
AWS
Cloud infrastructure
Browser-based
Nothing to install
Frequently asked

Questions about Asgard

What is Asgard?
Asgard is TheRecordXchange's browser-based platform for storing, managing, and securely accessing the court record. It runs on AWS and works with the recording systems courts already use.
Is the court record secure in Asgard?
Yes. Asgard runs on infrastructure that is SOC 2 Type II certified, with role-based access controls and an audit trail over who can reach the record.
Does Asgard work with our existing recording systems?
Asgard is vendor-agnostic, so a court can modernize how the record is stored and accessed without replacing the recording hardware already in the courtroom.
Access to justice

A transcript that arrives on time is an appeal heard on time. We measure our work in days returned to the people waiting on the system. That is access to justice, made concrete.

See the record platform in action. Request a presentation.

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