The Global Legal Hackathon Is One Month Away – Get Your Teams Ready!

The Global Legal Hackathon is all set to go and is now signing up any remaining entrants that have not contacted their local ‘nodes’ yet. The worldwide event will take place over the weekend of the 22 to 24 February and already has a wide range of cities and backers in this its second year.

The nodes that will be holding the hackathon range from locations in Brazil to the USA, and from Singapore to China, and merry England will also be taking part.

David Terrar of the UK’s Agile Elephant, who along with Wavelength Law and Cambridge Strategy, will be running the London node, told Artificial Lawyer: ‘You know the score from last year, only this year we aim to make London bigger, better and more inclusive and diverse, particularly in terms of gender.’

‘The host will be the University of Westminster, Regent Campus at 4-12 Little Titchfield Street, London, W1W 7BY. This gives us a 400 seat auditorium which connects to plenty of classrooms and a big open space for networking and eating. Our aim is to break 200 this year, but we can actually cater for up to 400 for space.’

Terrar said he wanted to point out the success of last year, which he also helped run the London node for, highlighting the case of one Fraser Matcham, who was in a team focused on a GDPR app last year.

‘He has since started Legal Utopia, and is in the process of commercialising the idea from last year, hopefully it will get to market this year. As well as that his company is doing an AI joint venture project with the University of Westminster, and in conjunction with that he has just been made their non-academic Director of Innovation.  It is he who has talked the University into being our host this year,’ said Terrar, by way of example to show the positive outcomes from the hackathon.

That said, no-one is under any pressure to make something that will go to market. The majority of teams will simply have a lot of fun, learn and share with their peers in the legal/legal tech community and hopefully come away with some new insights into the challenges and opportunities that relate to designing new software applications.

Artificial Lawyer’s advice is simple: go with the intention of having fun, if something more comes from this, then that’s a bonus.

The other key aspect of the hackathon this year is the GROWL initiative (see story in Artificial Lawyer), which is promoting women in legal tech. Wavelength Law’s Morgane Van Ermengem will be leading the initiative for the London node.

If you haven’t signed up yet to take part (and there are different ways you can get involved) then check out the main site and then find your nearest node using the handy graphic.

(Below: Just a sample of some of the nodes taking part. As you can see, this is seriously global – and this is just a sample.)

And, if you’d like to know more, you can check out this video with the human dynamo who started the whole thing – David Fisher, the boss of Integra Ledger and the Global Legal Blockchain Consortium.

Some of the ways to get involved – (this refers to the UK node, but is pretty much the same recipe for all the nodes globally)

  • Hacker teams and team members – Anyone involved in the law, interested in the law, involved in technology for the law, or coders and technologists who want to join the fun. We know some firms will submit teams, and other teams will form around a great idea at the GLH.
  • Helpers – We need volunteers over the weekend of February 22-24 to make it happen and keep everyone happy.
  • Mentors – We need subject matter experts and technologists who can mentor the teams over the weekend to help crystallise their ideas, challenge them, or keep them on track.
  • Judges – We are assembling a balanced team of five.

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