How innovative technology and the right implementation partner are transforming the justice record.
The official court record underpins the entire justice system. It is the authoritative account of proceedings, relied upon for appeals, legal interpretation, and public trust. Yet while its importance has not changed, the way the record is created, secured, and accessed has evolved dramatically.
The changes create many opportunities for contemporary justice systems to take advantage of.
Today, many jurisdictions are moving beyond a transcript-centric model toward a rich, multi-layered evidential record that combines audio, video, metadata, and AI-enhanced transcription. At the centre of this transformation is Redfish Technologies, a justice system audiovisual specialist, and the APAC partner for TheRecordXchange® (TRX).
This shift raises a critical question: Is the transcript still the official record, or is it time to recognise the recording itself as the primary source of truth?
Historically, the official record was created manually. Court reporters or stenographers captured proceedings in shorthand, later producing a typed transcript. This model positioned the transcript as:
While highly skilled stenographers achieved remarkable accuracy, the process was inherently dependent on human capacity and time. Delays, backlogs, and interpretation inconsistencies were unavoidable at scale.
The introduction of audio and video recording systems marked a major turning point. For the first time, courts had access to a verbatim capture of proceedings - a true source record.
However, early recording systems had limitations:
Crucially, the transcript remained dominant because it was usable. Recording systems supported accuracy, but did not fundamentally replace transcription workflows.
Today’s justice environment demands far more than simple recording. Modern court recording systems must be multi-track, capturing separate audio channels for:
This approach transforms raw media recordings into structured evidential datasets.
Each recording becomes:
This structure is critical for accuracy. It enables:
In effect, the official record is no longer just a document; it is a layered, data-rich system.
Despite improvements in recording quality, one major constraint persisted until recently: vendor lock-in.
Traditional court recording solutions were largely:
This created operational inefficiencies:
TheRecordXchange changes the paradigm, from fragmented tools to a unified, input-compatible, cloud-based record management system.
Open, interoperable record ingestion
TRX can ingest recordings from a wide range of systems, eliminating proprietary constraints and enabling courts to maintain flexibility in their recording infrastructure.
AI-powered transcription and synchronisation
Using automated speech-to-text, TheRecordXchange® generates a synchronised text layer aligned to the audio/video record, making the record searchable and significantly easier to navigate.
Secure, browser-based access
Authorised users can access recordings and transcripts securely through a standard browser, without specialised software. TheRecordXchange® has formalised and audited controls for handling and protecting customer data. It complies with SOC 2, an independently audited framework developed by the AICPA.
Localised, secure cloud infrastructure
With deployment on secure, in-country AWS cloud infrastructure, TRX supports jurisdictional data sovereignty requirements while ensuring resilience, scalability, and disaster recovery.
Image: The RecordXchange player
One of TheRecordXchange’s most powerful capabilities is how it governs access to the record, ensuring both security and usability.
ASGARD: Internal court access
TRX ASGARD provides a secure environment for Judges, court staff and approved internal users
Within ASGARD, users can:
This enables courts to treat the record as a live operational resource, not just a static archive.
REQUEST CENTRAL: Controlled external access
For public and stakeholder access, TheRecordXchange provides Request Central, a structured request management system that:
This replaces fragmented and manual processes with auditable, policy-driven access control, ensuring transparency while protecting sensitive information.
With these capabilities in place, the debate becomes unavoidable:
The case for transcripts
The case for recordings
The reality is that courts no longer need to choose.
TheRecordXchange enables a hybrid model, where:
This transition can occur gradually, supporting existing practices while unlocking new efficiencies.
Beyond accuracy and accessibility, this transformation delivers measurable operational benefits:
For courts under increasing resource pressure, these gains are essential.
While platforms like TRX redefine how records are managed, their quality still depends on how they are captured and the capability and efficiency of the entire solution.
Redfish Technologies brings deep expertise in audiovisual solutions for the justice sector. The company brings a rare level of subject-matter expertise focused on delivering the very best results. The approach delivers the technical capability that jurisdictions specify, but it also achieves considerably more.
By delivering systems that perform for all users, with the highest standards of quality, usability, and reliability, the result benefits justice system operations and mitigates the risks and costs of system and operator failure.
In effect, the justice record is developed and managed as a combination of capture, recording, access and use:
As a specialist justice-sector integrator, Redfish ensures that:
Their role as the APAC partner for TRX creates a powerful combination:
This ensures courts can maximise the value of both their recording systems and their digital record strategy.
The justice system is entering a new phase where the official record is no longer a single artefact. It is a secure, structured, and accessible digital ecosystem.
TheRecordXchange® enables courts to:
With Redfish Technologies providing the expertise to capture and integrate these systems in real-world environments, courts across APAC have a clear pathway forward.
The question is no longer whether the record will evolve. It already has. The question is how courts choose to manage that evolution.
Contact us to learn more about managing the official record in your jurisdiction.
This article was prepared for Redfish Technologies, a specialist provider of integrated audiovisual and evidential recording systems across justice, law enforcement, and government sectors. As the APAC partner for TheRecordXchange®, Redfish enables courts to modernise how the official record is captured, managed, and accessed - combining best-practice recording systems with secure, AI-powered cloud solutions.