2015 put legal hacking on the global map. The movement bubbled over from the East Coast to California and beyond with enthusiasts busily getting the word out to the legal community.
Now in-house counsel, entrepreneurial lawyers and law students are developing ways to use hacking to make some legal processes more comprehensible and user-friendly for consumers. "It's not breaking into government servers," said Amy Y. Wan, co-founder of Legal Hackers LA and general counsel at Patch of...
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