Hi! The world is moving terribly fast, and we wake up every day a little more ignorant than we were the day before. One of the hardest things is not knowing where to start -- Hopefully, this list will help people who are interested in learning more about law and technology, but don't really know where to begin.
How do technology and law intersect?
The management of information is crucial to the proper functioning of any legal system. A good legal system relies on information about the world itself (such as evidence of who did what and when) as well as more purely legal information (such as court rulings, statutes, contracts, and so forth). Legal Informatics is the theory and practice of managing such information. It covers both legal theory and information theory. (Source)
Open source NLP and machine learning for legal texts: What is Blackstone and how did we build it?
Computational law is a branch of legal informatics concerned with the mechanization of legal reasoning (whether done by humans or by computers) (Source)
Computational Law: The Cop in the Backseat, Michael Genesereth
The British Nationality Act as a Logic Program, Sergot et al.
Computational Contract Collaboration and Construction, Wong Meng Weng et al.
How are data, technology, and its applications regulated?
AI Goes to Court: The Growing Landscape of AI for Access to Justice
A Gentle introduction to Graph Theory
Stanford Legal Design & Innovation on Medium
Machine Lawyering - Chinese University of Hong Kong
A blog organized and edited by the CUHK Law Faculty's Centre for Financial Regulation and Economic Development. Entries address the application of information technology to law, legal transactions and regulation.
2019 State of Legal Innovation Report Asia Pacific
B2C2 Ltd v Quoine Pte Ltd - Singapore's first legal dispute relating to cryptocurrency
Asia-Pacific Legal Innovation and Technology Association | Legal Hackers SG (Facebook | Telegram Channel) | NUS Law alt+law | SMU Legal Innovation and Technology (LIT)
The Wisdom and/or Madness of Crowds: an interactive guide to human networks
Make a pull request, and add your name (or github handle, whatever floats your boat) to the contributor section above! If you want to talk, I can be found on Telegram @szktm.
You might find this GitHub guide on basic writing and formatting syntax helpful.