Lawyer Ex Machina #11: a "general holiday for the laboring classes"
"More Than $100 Million Worth of NFTs Have Been Stolen This Year, a New Report Finds."
A acquaintance/colleague of mine has written a short piece on what NFTs are and how they lead to a lot of tangled questions regarding rights, ownership, downstream uses, etc.
The Artificial Lawyer has the finalists for this year's American Legal Technology Awards.
3 Geeks and a Law Blog has an episode devoted to whether law schools professors are doing enough to teach technology skills to students.
UCLA Law professor Gary Blasi was interviewed on KQED about the Eviction Defense Tool - an automated website to help California renters served with eviction papers file an answer in court while seeking legal assistance. [KQED story | Cal Matters article]
From Bloomberg Law: "Metaverse Technology Opens Up A Wider World of Privacy Concerns" [$]
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is suing a data broker for allegedly selling "sensitive location data that can identify specific abortion-seekers, religious worshipers or others who may be at risk of discrimination, intimidation or even violence." [Complaint]
One of my favorite writers in the legaltech space, Bob Ambrogi, has a couple of posts regarding ILTACON '22:
A breakdown of the major themes at ILTACON, including platform fatigue, interoperability, and price simplification.
A panel at ILTACON focusing on natural language processing in legal research, and moving beyond keyword searches.