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08:50
Introductory remarks, greetings
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Gergely DELI
(Rector, University of Public Service)
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09:00
Future Justice: some impacts of legal technology on the administration of justice.
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Dory REILING
(Former senior judge of the Amsterdam District Court, independent legaltech expert)
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09:25
A brief history of LegalTech
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Kai JACOB
(Founder and co-chair of the Liquid Legal Institute, Partner in Legal Operations & Transformation Services at KPMG Law)
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09:50
Human factors in dispute resolutions - can artificial intelligence and the use of smart contracts help resolve disputes?
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Darius SZOSTEK
(Professor of the Faculty of Law and Administration at the University of Silesia)
Rafał Tomasz PRABUCKI
(Assistant professor at the University of Silesia for the MAS4AI project)
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11:05
Electronic communication with the court considering the traditional rules of civil procedure – on the example of the Polish legal regulations
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Berenika KACZMAREK-TEMPLIN
(Assistant professor at the Faculty of Management of the Wrocław University of Science and Technology)
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11:30
Artificial Intelligence in criminal justice: recent experience from Malaysia
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Boldizsár SZENTGÁLI-TÓTH
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11:45
Protecting consumers by design
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Borbála Tünde DÖMÖTÖRFY
Judit FIRNIKSZ
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13:25
Do androids dream about biased judges? – Self-fulfilling prophecies in litigation prediction by AI
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János VAJDA
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13:40
Lawtech as a means of legal empowerment – the empirical lessons learned from a legal aid program
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Valéria Eszter HORVÁTH
(UPS Department of International Law / Budapest Bar Association)
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13:55
Legal design for GDPR compliance
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Bence KIS KELEMEN
(senior lecturer (University of Pécs, Faculty of Law, Óriás Nándor Szakkollégium Law and Technology Working Group))
Gergely KAPPEL
(student (University of Pécs, Faculty of Law, Óriás Nándor Szakkollégium Law and Technology Working Group))
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14:55
Robolawyers and legal chatbot services
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Dániel NECZ
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15:10
Online dispute resolution systems. A real alternative of courts?
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Dóra PÁLFI
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15:25
The incorporation of ICT’s in the Chilean and Latin-American civil justice systems. Analysis from an access to justice and judicial reform perspectives
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Ricardo LILLO
(Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD) University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). Assistant professor at Universidad Adolfo Ibañez School of Law)