MIT Legal Hackathon 2014 was held 12-16 June 2014 at MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts; in London, England; in New York, New York; and online.
The event was organized by the Media Lab’s Legal Physics / Legal Science Research Team (whose Websites appear to be here and here), led by Dazza Greenwood .
The event’s Website is at: http://ift.tt/1piVPxG
Videos from the event are at: http://ift.tt/1piVPxQ and http://ift.tt/1ijtGo6
The hackpad for the event is at http://ift.tt/1vqTFMV
Videos from the event are at: http://ift.tt/1piVPxQ
A video describing the event is at: http://ift.tt/1piVRG0
The program is at: http://ift.tt/1klnWo8
According to the registration page:
Live small group discussion and team collaboration for this event will be conducted through MIT Media Lab Unhangout sessions and augmented by live broadcasts embedded on the conference blog [...]
The event included an Unconference, for which participants can propose their own sessions: http://ift.tt/1piVPxO
The blog for the event is at: http://ift.tt/1piVPxQ
The announcement of the event is at: http://ift.tt/1piVPxS
The Twitter hashtags for the event appear to be #legalhack and #legalhackathon
Click here for a storify of tweets and photos from the event.
Click here for archived Twitter tweets from the event, in .csv format.
Here is a description of the event, from the announcement:
The MIT Legal Hackathon is an online participatory event taking place between June 12th and June 15th and serves as the kick-off of a series of projects and other activities happening through the summer of 2014. We’d like to invite ‘hackers’ to attend sessions, collaborate on relevant issues, and even create their own sessions.
The goal of the event is to bring together people to collaborate on solving legal and technical issues and challenges as law and business become fully digital. Software developers, business people, academics, government employees, advocates and others. Participants will have the opportunity to offer or join sessions to collaborate on “hacking the law” by developing computer and legal projects. The themes include :
- Transitioning statutes, regulations and other law from paper, PDF and proprietary document formats to freely accessible open data
- Enabling the exercise of personal data rights with user-centered consent management and open notice and other fair information practices
- Using statistical modeling and predictive analytics to gain deeper insights into legal data sets and systems, including the propagation of Uniform Law through the states
- Transitioning government offices to open source software
- Advancing the tools and tests needed to express the rules in effective legal language
- Many other themes, topics and projects…
Some of the notable activities expected at the Legal Hackathon include work on putting law online, creating innovative privacy solutions and developing apps for better access to justice. [...]
There are four challenges associated with the event:
- Clio Challenge
- Annotation Challenge
- Effective Legal Language Challenge
- Controlling and Exercising Data Rights Challenge
For more details, please see the Website.
Filed under: Applications, Conference resources, Hackathons, Hacking, Storify, Technology developments, Technology tools, Tweet archives, Videos Tagged: #LegalHack, #legalhackathon, Data privacy law information systems, Dazza Greenwood, Legal annotation, Legal hackathons, Legal hacking events, Legal plain language, MIT Legal Hackathon, MIT Legal Hackathon 2014, MIT Legal Physics Research Team, Plain language and law, Plain legal language, Privacy law information systems
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