 Welcome to the closing plenary kind of wrap up session of day two of MIT's computational law course. We just finished our first try at doing breakout sessions completely online and we think it was a success. We were able to get the mechanics working. We had good engagement, interesting questions. We were able to sort of chew gum and and pedal at the same time with, you know, multiple things happening. We also have a... except for the video freeze and there were spills and thrills all around. Here's the team that's here and we're down one. TMA's helping us monitor and facilitate an in-person meeting that's happening downstairs right now. So by way of wrap up you can actually experience all the joys of each of the breakout sessions in the session page. There are now uploaded YouTube archives embedded right in the page and you can follow along with the with the pigeonhole questions and coming up tomorrow looking forward I'm going to do a quick screen share here and we put a couple of updates for you. Boom. Okay, present to everyone. Great. So we'll get started tomorrow at 11 a.m. where we'll ask the as many as possible of the breakout leaders to join us to do a quick round robin of what their sessions are about so that you can be a little bit refreshed and we'll provide a mechanism and we'll also do a bit of a, you know, just a kind of an overview and a synthesis of everything that's happened so far and then at 11 30 to 2 in that period of time we'll have each of the breakout sessions. Some sessions, you know, may be staggered so check the page and more information on the agenda for that for example. I know that Elizabeth Reneres' session for example on the competing legal frameworks for human identity in a data-driven age is going to be starting a little later so that may be something more like one to two, something like that. So one quick update is we've decided that the VAT tax thing is so damn good. So darn good. We're talking about maybe doing a standalone event and having a little more time also to find those people that are really into VAT to engage as opposed to, and we think generally from today's experience having some fewer breakout sessions may actually be more enriching for people. So that's one update. It's also actually not as easy to run multiple breakout sessions as we somehow thought that it might be. So something that you can expect is a kind of a design workshop on valuation and other legal treatments in a bankruptcy setting of tokens like ICO type tokens that that looks like it's going to be very interesting. There's also going to be a much deeper dive on integrating interoperable apps and services with a legal platform. In this case it's the e-discovery context and relativity and the first couple of sessions on that were quite good. Brian, I know facility the first one that was engaging and Diana, you facility the second and it seemed like it was it was pretty deep. Yeah, hopefully it seemed good to me. I popped in from time to time. So that's going to be and they'll be looking at Slack tomorrow, which is so interesting in part because it's an example of how lawyers can work differently. Not necessarily so document centered and serial in the work, but we can kind of have more asynchronous work. We can have multiple people collaborating at one time. This human centered approach of that real time chat as a work method makes available as opposed to the kind of document centered paradigm that's so characteristic of law. We think it's a particularly good example and so we're glad that he's going to be looking at that. As I mentioned Elizabeth Reneres is going to be doing a fascinating session on property legal frameworks and or human rights and civil liberties frameworks of which one is the most appropriate and when does each apply to digital identity of people and personal data. Smart contracts including looking at how it applies to music licensing is going to be terrific as well. Michelle Gitlitz from blank Rome is going to be leading that session and she did just what a terrific overview of the law of smart contracts. So we're very much looking forward to that. And finally what we're calling collectivization of knowledge, the urgency of now. This is a session with Johnny Penn. Let me get back to the stop. Okay here we go back to a human speaking of humans on the video. Well if we haven't have we uploaded Christina's video yet? So possibly so we look for the session page for that we shot a yes so it's not there yet we shot a amazing interview with Christina from Uni Global Unions, the sort of union of unions in a way or umbrella unions taking a serious look at workers and data rights and posing five seminal questions that that discussion group is going to be focusing on. I won't give it away. You can hear her say it in a sort of interview format in the intersession page. So terrific set of breakouts tomorrow and we've got an adequate amount of time at the end of the day like an hour and a half or more where we'll all come together in one big session like we did in the first day and and be able to have a hear about what happened in each of the sessions day two and day three and then basically carry forward in a discussion format with with you in pigeonhole and in telegram and and and in some cases live with us remotely online for the discussion leaders and invited lecturers and some people in the room Brian among all Brian's and so so don't miss that absolutely join us for the for the kind of closing big session tomorrow which is what time anybody the closing session is closing sessions to three three three two to four basically two p.m. to four p.m. Eastern time so with that team on anything else that we should mention oh there's one thing on check your email for all the interesting requests for resources and links and so forth we've fulfilled I think every one of those on some cases where we can have a tracking number and a GitHub issue and we'll give you some of the background topics on identity but for the most part we got links and answers we set up a GitHub directory in our class repository for data playground for those of you that were interested in that so there's a stub at least to kind of get started and let us know if you want to go further with that and read the email for all of our answers to the outstanding questions and let this be a lesson to you among other things that if you have questions ask them ask is the only way you might receive and so please do and you know it's interesting for us to know what you want to know it helps us adjust to know what's relevant and the questions honestly I thought we're good like it was terrific doing the research and half the time I was thinking ah we should have put this on the curriculum so so success and we anything else that we should I'm just happy that everybody's contributing because it makes the course I think it gives the course a way to add value to the students and vice versa as well it makes everybody everybody forward in a meaningful way so I just want to say thank you for everybody who's asking for this stuff that we can provide it and that you know next time that we do this it's all going to be in one place and everybody's going to be able to use it they're here I'm with the promise of distributed systems and the get protocol it could all be in all places I guess so yeah it's true collaborate teamwork makes the dream work so until tomorrow thanks very much and you know do your homework do your do your watching of the videos and and we look forward to hacking the law in a good way again with you tomorrow