One Twitter hashtag for the event was #legalhack
Click here for a storify of images and Twitter tweets from the event.
Here are the winners of the awards, according to a list sent by Rebecca Williams, co-organizer of DC Legal Hackers:
- Company of the Year: Fastcase, led by Phil Rosenthal and Ed Walters
- Organization of the Year: Free Law Founders, whose many members are listed here
- Legal Hacker of the Year: Dave Zvenyach
Top 10 Legal Hacks of the Year:
- Capitol Bells, founded by Ted Henderson
- Coding for Lawyers, written by Dave Zvenyach
- @CongressEdits, developed by Ed Summers
- Contact Congress, part of The @unitedstates Project
- Free Law Project — Oral Arguments, by Brian Carver and Michael Lissner
- Legal Citation Hackathon, organized by DC Legal Hackers
- Oversight.io, developed by Eric Mill
- Patent Board Ferret, developed by Trent Ostler
- SCOTUS Mapping Project, developed by Colin Starger
- @SCOTUS_servo, developed by Dave Zvenyach
Click here for more information about the legal hacking movement.
Filed under: Applications, Award or prize announcements, Data sets, Software, Storify, Technology developments, Technology tools Tagged: DC Legal Hackers, Innovation in legal technology, Le Hackie Awards, Le Hackie Awards 2014, Legal hacking events, Legal hacking movement, Legal technology innovation