← All solutions
Use case

Keep the record protected and recoverable.

A record that lives on one machine is one failure away from gone. TRX keeps proceedings secure, backed up, and recoverable — off the courthouse's hardware.

Disaster recovery for the court record means proceedings remain protected and restorable after hardware failure, loss, or disruption. TRX stores the record in browser-based, SOC 2 Type II certified infrastructure on AWS.

The challenge

Why local storage puts the record at risk.

Single points of failure

When the record sits on one workstation or server, recovery depends entirely on that one piece of hardware.

Backups that aren't proven

Assuming a backup works is not the same as knowing it does. The record demands more certainty than that.

Recovery that takes too long

If restoring the record after an incident is slow or manual, the court feels every hour of it.

How TRX helps

The record, off your hardware and recoverable.

01

Stored in audited cloud infrastructure

Asgard keeps the record on AWS, secured by SOC 2 Type II certified controls — not on a courthouse machine.

02

Access that survives the hardware

Because access is browser-based, losing a device or a server doesn't mean losing reach to the record.

03

Security and recovery as the default

Protection of the record is built into the platform, not a process the court has to run by hand.

The products behind it
Frequently asked

Disaster Recovery: common questions

How does TRX protect the court record from loss?
TRX stores the record in browser-based, SOC 2 Type II certified infrastructure on AWS rather than on a courthouse machine, so a single hardware failure does not put the record at risk.
Is the record recoverable after an incident?
Because the record lives in audited cloud infrastructure and access is browser-based, losing a device or a server does not mean losing reach to the record.
Do we have to run backups ourselves?
No. Protection of the record is built into the platform rather than a process the court has to run by hand.
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.

Protect the record. Request a presentation.

Request a presentation