The MIT Computational Law Report is an agile, new media online publication that explores the ways that law and legal processes can be reimagined and engineered as computational systems. The Report features: 1. Traditional written content (such as peer-reviewed articles, essays, and posts); 2. Rich media content (such as videos, podcasts, visualizations, etc); and 3. Reproducible software and data projects (such as computational law apps, automated processes, data science projects, games, etc). The Report is published and edited by law.mit.edu - affiliated academics, researchers, and practitioners. The creators of the MIT Computational Law Report joined LegalTechLIVE, to discuss this move to provide us with a better, richer, experience when it comes to advancements in computational law. Take a look at this incredibly fun interview with Dazza Greenwood and Bryan Wilson, the minds behind the MIT Computational Law Report. For the first time, guests had demanded a particular co-host, Hannah Konitshek. LegalTechLIVE obliged because Hannah is awesome! More about the MIT Computational Law Report: http://law.mit.edu/. More about Dazza Greenwood: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dazzagree.... More about Bryan Wilson: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryangw/. Dazza Greenwood on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dazzagreenwood. Bryan Wilson on Twitter: https://twitter.com/bryangwilson. Hannah Konitshek on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hannah-ko.... Hannah Konitshek on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HannahKonnn. Hannah Konitshek on Legal.io: https://www.legal.io/users/view/55cce.... More episodes available on: https://legaltechlive.com/.   Category Science & Technology

The MIT Computational Law Report is an agile, new media online publication that explores the ways that law and legal processes can be reimagined and engineered as computational systems. The Report features: 1. Traditional written content (such as peer-reviewed articles, essays, and posts); 2. Rich media content (such as videos, podcasts, visualizations, etc); and 3. Reproducible software and data projects (such as computational law apps, automated processes, data science projects, games, etc). The Report is published and edited by law.mit.edu - affiliated academics, researchers, and practitioners. The creators of the MIT Computational Law Report joined LegalTechLIVE, to discuss this move to provide us with a better, richer, experience when it comes to advancements in computational law. Take a look at this incredibly fun interview with Dazza Greenwood and Bryan Wilson, the minds behind the MIT Computational Law Report. For the first time, guests had demanded a particular co-host, Hannah Konitshek. LegalTechLIVE obliged because Hannah is awesome! More about the MIT Computational Law Report: http://law.mit.edu/. More about Dazza Greenwood: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dazzagree.... More about Bryan Wilson: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryangw/. Dazza Greenwood on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dazzagreenwood. Bryan Wilson on Twitter: https://twitter.com/bryangwilson. Hannah Konitshek on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hannah-ko.... Hannah Konitshek on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HannahKonnn. Hannah Konitshek on Legal.io: https://www.legal.io/users/view/55cce.... More episodes available on: https://legaltechlive.com/.   Category Science & Technology

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