The first MIT Legal Science Salon online event was held 13 March 2014. , at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
The event was organized by Dazza Greenwood, JD, of MIT Media Lab, as part of his Computational Legal Science research program.
The event Website is at: http://ift.tt/Nv1ErE
Click here for the conference program.
Video of the first part of the event is available at: http://ift.tt/1oSRblj
Video of the second part of the event is available at: http://ift.tt/OaykXJ
The Twitter hashtag for the event appears to have been #LegalScience
Click here for a storify of Twitter tweets from the event.
Click here for archived Twitter tweets from the event, in .csv format.
Click here for a video describing the event.
Information about the event is also being posted to the eCitizen blog.
Joshua Lenon has posted slides of his presentation entitled What Happens When Robots Join Law Firms .
HT @JoshuaLenon and Dazza Greenwood
Filed under: Applications, Slides, Storify, Technology developments, Technology tools, Tweet archives, Videos Tagged: Artificial intelligence and law, Computational legal science, Dazza Greenwood, Digital assets, Digital estates, Digital property, Electronic property, Estate planning information systems, Evan Carroll, Free access to law, Intelligent agents' practicing law, Jonathan Askin, Joshua Lenon, Law and robotics, Law practice technology, Legal communication, Legal communication in state governments, Legal informatics conferences, Mapping legal communication, Mapping legal communication in state governments, MIT Legal Science Salon, MIT Media Lab, Online legal publishing, Open legal data, Property law information systems, Public access to legal information, Ray Campbell, Robotics and law, Seamus Kraft, State Decoded, The State Decoded
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