https://pythonforlaw.com/2020/09/27/mlang-compiled-python.ht... > As Merigoux explained more fully on his blog, this project became possible because the French government open-sourced the code that they use to calculate…
Sure, but the intended user for a lot of this stuff isn't the lawyer – it's the end-user who's glad to have an alternative to the lawyer! Like, owning a bicycle means I don't need to call a taxi for some trips. Not all…
Yeah, the more black-and-white domains tend to be financial and commercial – and in those domains, there have been some pretty cool illustrations: http://complaw.stanford.edu/complaw/readings/sla.pdf
In these classic papers, lawyers excitedly discover formal logic. Worth a quick scroll just for the diagrams, which wil make you laugh. https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/fss_papers/4519/…
One of the most salutary responses to the ambition of bringing "digital transformation" to the legal industry comes from PaulG himself: https://twitter.com/paulg/status/1384422654195683328 > In 2008 I spent a month…
Thanks Pierre and Paul for the links! For folks who happen to be unreasonably interested in this stuff: there are research engineer positions open at the Centre for Computational Law at Singapore Management University…
Sorry about that! I'm adding a link to the PDF version which I think is tagged for accessibility. So you should be able to click on the image and go to the PDF. Give me a while, though, am fighting with Jekyll.
You're quite right. Garbage in, garbage out. And if the cost of generating garbage goes down, we're going to get a lot more of it! There are definite risks in misinterpretation and complexity and cruft. As Genesereth…
Things are happening at the bleeding edge of computational law that move this debate into new territory. (TL;DR: yes, "law is code". And $10M of fresh funding says law should be open-source code, to be precise. Hackers…
Technology innovation: "Can it be done?" Market innovation: "Should it be done?" Regulatory innovation: "May it be done?"
Maybe. Maybe not. What if the model changes? Today's model of contracting is fire-and-regret: spec out as much as you can of the next five or ten years, and when the world changes, litigate. That's not very agile. Hart…
Contracts are similar to software in many ways, but a few crucial differences justify a whole new programming language custom-made for the task. Not a markup language: a full-blown strongly typed specification language…
Nice work! Other projects in this space include http://www.commonaccord.org/ and http://www.contractstandards.com/clause I am tracking instances of this genre at http://www.legalese.io/#priorart
https://pythonforlaw.com/2020/09/27/mlang-compiled-python.ht... > As Merigoux explained more fully on his blog, this project became possible because the French government open-sourced the code that they use to calculate…
Sure, but the intended user for a lot of this stuff isn't the lawyer – it's the end-user who's glad to have an alternative to the lawyer! Like, owning a bicycle means I don't need to call a taxi for some trips. Not all…
Yeah, the more black-and-white domains tend to be financial and commercial – and in those domains, there have been some pretty cool illustrations: http://complaw.stanford.edu/complaw/readings/sla.pdf
In these classic papers, lawyers excitedly discover formal logic. Worth a quick scroll just for the diagrams, which wil make you laugh. https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/fss_papers/4519/…
One of the most salutary responses to the ambition of bringing "digital transformation" to the legal industry comes from PaulG himself: https://twitter.com/paulg/status/1384422654195683328 > In 2008 I spent a month…
Thanks Pierre and Paul for the links! For folks who happen to be unreasonably interested in this stuff: there are research engineer positions open at the Centre for Computational Law at Singapore Management University…
Sorry about that! I'm adding a link to the PDF version which I think is tagged for accessibility. So you should be able to click on the image and go to the PDF. Give me a while, though, am fighting with Jekyll.
You're quite right. Garbage in, garbage out. And if the cost of generating garbage goes down, we're going to get a lot more of it! There are definite risks in misinterpretation and complexity and cruft. As Genesereth…
Things are happening at the bleeding edge of computational law that move this debate into new territory. (TL;DR: yes, "law is code". And $10M of fresh funding says law should be open-source code, to be precise. Hackers…
Technology innovation: "Can it be done?" Market innovation: "Should it be done?" Regulatory innovation: "May it be done?"
Maybe. Maybe not. What if the model changes? Today's model of contracting is fire-and-regret: spec out as much as you can of the next five or ten years, and when the world changes, litigate. That's not very agile. Hart…
Contracts are similar to software in many ways, but a few crucial differences justify a whole new programming language custom-made for the task. Not a markup language: a full-blown strongly typed specification language…
Nice work! Other projects in this space include http://www.commonaccord.org/ and http://www.contractstandards.com/clause I am tracking instances of this genre at http://www.legalese.io/#priorart