A kind of wikilaw?
https://www.bespacific.com/there-is-no-single-place-to-find-the-worlds-laws/
There is no single place to find the world’s laws
Zacharie Laïk – There is no single place to find the world’s laws. “Legal Data Hunter is trying to fix that and 10 weeks in, it might actually work. 2 weeks ago, 351 collection scripts built by an AI agent to index the world’s laws were open sourced. Within days, lawyers and developers from around the world started opening issues on the repo – requesting sources, flagging gaps, offering local expertise. No financial incentive. Just people wanting their own laws to be findable.
Here’s
what it looks like:
→ Eros
Chan (Lawvable
)
asked about China – 29,000 laws now indexed.
→ Nephelie
Amolochitou Viskadouraki, LL.M., ASCO suggested
the Hellenic Capital Market Commission (HCMC) for Greek financial
regulation – collector built and validated.
→ Timothy (from
Solid Rock) pointed Hunter to the USPTO Open Data Portal for US
patent and appeals decisions – now tracked and in pipeline.
→
Donald Henderson flagged Ontario e-Laws – 857 statutes and 2,190
regulations identified, collector built.
→ Bencium®
Agentic AI suggested
Hungary’s national legislation database AND the UK’s new Lex API
for legislation – both collectors running.
→ Luca
Árpási pointed
agent to Hungary’s full court decision archive AND the Competition
Authority’s published resolutions – both being indexed.
→ Niall
C. mapped
out 5 separate UK planning appeal databases across England, Scotland,
Wales, and Northern Ireland – restructured the entire UK
map.
→ Stephen
Abbott Pugh suggested
South Africa’s Open By-laws – now in pipeline.
→ Patricia
Perelló Ibarra contributed
3 pages of Spanish sources – being indexed live.
Some went from “issue opened” to “fully indexed” in under 48 hours.
Status
update:
– 674 collection scripts (up from 351 2 weeks ago)
–
18,000,000+ documents indexed
– 100+ countries covered
–
550+ open legal data sources tracked
Legal Data Hunter runs every 30 minutes to make all open legal sources searchable. It writes collectors, tests them, fixes what breaks. While it doesn’t yet know every jurisdiction by heart – you might be able to help it figure out your own. If there is a legal source missing from your country, please open an issue. In many cases it can get indexed in days. We’re still looking for Jurisdiction Leads – people who want to own coverage for their country in what we think might become the world’s first exhaustive database of open legal data. What’s missing from your jurisdiction?”
As long as AI is not a person…
https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/rethink-responsibility-in-the-age-of-ai/
Rethink Responsibility in the Age of AI
As AI systems take on more organizational decision-making, traditional models of accountability — focused on identifying a single culprit when something goes wrong — are breaking down. Drawing on recent research, the authors introduce narrative responsibility, a framework that maps the real story behind failures, distributes ownership across teams, and embeds ongoing reflection into everyday practice. This approach is essential for organizations navigating the complexity of AI-enabled decisions.
Early one morning in 2018, a self-driving Uber vehicle fatally struck a pedestrian in Tempe, Arizona. The world had questions: Who was responsible? Was it the safety driver behind the wheel? The engineers who designed the algorithms? Uber’s leadership? Or the regulators who had allowed autonomous-vehicle testing? The inability to name a single culprit signaled a profound shift in how responsibility must be understood and attributed in the age of intelligent technologies.
If you were US Intel, would you buy tis?
https://www.cnn.com/2026/04/08/china/china-supercomputer-hackers-hnk-intl
A hacker has allegedly breached one of China’s supercomputers and is attempting to sell a trove of stolen data
A hacker has allegedly stolen a massive trove of sensitive data – including highly classified defense documents and missile schematics – from a state-run Chinese supercomputer in what could potentially constitute the largest known heist of data from China.
The dataset, which allegedly contains more than 10 petabytes of sensitive information, is believed by experts to have been obtained from the National Supercomputing Center (NSCC) in Tianjin – a centralized hub that provides infrastructure services for more than 6,000 clients across China, including advanced science and defense agencies.
… Cyber security experts who have reviewed the data say the group is offering a limited preview of the alleged dataset, for thousands of dollars, with full access priced at hundreds of thousands of dollars. Payment was requested in cryptocurrency.
Maybe I’ll make up my own…
https://www.adamsmith.org/blog/my-final-list-of-useful-maxims
My final List of Useful Maxims