Responding to challenges to inspire & build better technological futures, supporting seminars, research training, skills and capacity development @qutlaw#QUT
🙏As we come to the end of 2024, we would like to acknowledge and thank the Editorial team, International Editorial Board, authors and the Journal reviewers for their significant and valuable contributions throughout the year #LawTech#OpenAccess
ALT Photo by Jonathan Kemper on Unsplash
Law, Technology and Humans - thanks
This #OAWeek 2024 we’re celebrating🎉 did you know the journal is only one of ten Australasian journals with the #OA@DOAJplus Seal for best practice🔓lthj.qut.edu.au/DOAJ
In latest issue @BuiltTech examines the rise of Large Language Models (LLMs) in the field of generative #AI and the practice of designing inputs (prompts) to drive optimal outputs for these models are transforming legal practice @qutlaw
đź”—doi.org/10.5204/lthj.3483
ALT Prompts and Large Language Models: A New Tool for Drafting, Reviewing and Interpreting Contracts?
🆕latest issue
Will Cesta explores the regulation of judicial analytics proposing a case for ensuring that work embraces consistent terminology, uses empirical methods and develops a robust theory of regulatory success #JudicialData
đź”—doi.org/10.5204/lthj.3400
ALT The Regulation of Judicial Analytics: Towards a New Research Agenda
🆕In latest issue:
Harry Jobberns and @michael_guihot discuss the extent to which computer automated decision-making processes in government are being legislatively adopted, the risks and calls for increased debate before these authorisations @qutlaw
đź”—doi.org/10.5204/lthj.3408
ALT Digital Governance and Neoliberalism: The Evolution of Machine Learning in Australian Public Policy