 I am Joseph Caputo, a law student working with the Ethical Tech Initiative of DC at the George Washington University, a Pitt-UN grantee. This year, the Ethical Tech Initiative of DC partnered with the Access to Justice Techfellows program. The program provides summer internships to students who are interested in exploring how technology can be used to deliver critical legal services to those who need them. I was sponsored by ETI to be an Access to Justice Techfellow at the self-represented litigation network this past summer. It was a fantastic experience that deepened my knowledge about the intersection between technology and public interest law. Hi, I'm Jennifer Taw, a third-year law student working with the Ethical Tech Initiative of Pitt-UN grantee. I'm working with an amazing team to create a database for AI litigation, which is exciting because it combines something that I know a lot about, legal research on a cutting-edge topic with something that I'm learning something new about every day, database design, so it is right at the intersection of two disciplines that I'm putting together for the first time. My name is Chris Forshella, and as a law student, I helped to launch the Ethical Tech Initiative at the George Washington University Law School. We see the Ethical Tech Initiative at UW advancing the field of public interest technology in both the academy and in the DC community. A major component of our work entails bringing in public interest technologists to join the university on a short-term basis, sharing their expertise, and engaging students and faculty about the issues they're currently seeing in the field. The other major piece involves collaborating with government agencies and local nonprofits to make legal information and other resources more accessible to underserved members of the DC community. We're still in the early stages, but we expect that as our program matures, the Ethical Tech Initiative at UW will be able to produce a model that can be replicated across the broader public interest technology university network. Public interest technology is a field that's growing incredibly quickly and at the same time is still in the process of defining itself. Issues like algorithmic decision making, content moderation of hate speech and misinformation, data privacy, data security, access to technology, access to justice, smart devices in the home, smart devices in the body, these continue to capture our imagination and our concern. The Ethical Tech Initiative Team at UW expects that we'll see universities recognize this and adjust their curricula accordingly over the next few years to better prepare the next generation of graduates to tackle these issues responsibly, creatively and collaboratively. Over the next decade, we look forward to seeing how the various members of the public interest technology community will define the intersections at which they operate. The silos in which we've been teaching and learning our individual disciplines are inefficient and arguably obsolete for the world in which we find ourselves. We expect that public interest technology as a field will involve redefining disciplines in a new, more collaborative way.