Ex parte examination of patent, trademark and design applications is usually just a matter between the examiner and applicant, but sometimes ex parte matters need to be decided by the Commissioner, the Deputy Commissioner, or the Hearing Officer (פוסק בקנין רוחני in Hebrew, which translates more literally as "intellectual property decisor"), e.g. when there's a dispute between the applicant and the examiner that can't be resolved, or when an applicant or patentee seeks revival of an abandoned application or patent. Those individuals also decide inter partes disputes: pre-grant oppositions, and post-grant cancellation actions, as well as awards of expenses and attorneys' fees in those cases. There are also sometimes decisions from a statutorily-created ILPTO committee about inventors' entitlement to royalties and whether or not a particular invention constitutes a service invention.
The ILPTO posts the decisions of these adjudicative proceedings on its web site. The search engine for searching these decisions allows filtering on the basis of type of proceeding (e.g. cancellation, reinstatement, declaration of service invention status), legal area of case (e.g. patent, TM, attorneys' fees), and type of decision (interim or final), and also has a field for text searching, as well as date range, but it's not clear how well indexed any of those fields are. If you want a better search engine, there's a commercial operation that takes these decisions, indexes them better than the ILPTO, and makes them available along with thousands of other court decisions with a better search engine.
What I don't get, though, is why the ILPTO's site only shows ten results at a time. See the screenshot below, taken today.
Note that supposedly there are presently 2548 decisions on the site. Even if uses some filters so that there are only, say, 100 results, that's 10 screens to scroll through.
Moreover, this problem isn't limited to the lists of decisions. It's true, for example, of displays of the Patents Journal, which only displays five Journals at a time, each in MS Word and pdf formats; and Commissioner's circulars, which likewise are only listed 10 at a time.
It would be nice if the ILPTO allowed users to see 50 or 100 or all relevant results at a time, like many other search engines do.