This module assumes no prior knowledge of law and is not seeking to produce legal experts. Rather, it is commercially focused and will provide students with hands-on experience of a contemporary LegalTech application or process so that they can develop a practical understanding of the opportunities and risks of using technology to deliver or enhance legal services. Successful students will discover the way that technology has transformed other sectors outside of law (e.g. FinTech, media, medicine), and how this can help us to understand, predict or even design new types of legal practice and new types of ‘lawyer’, to better support business more broadly. This module will establish legal concepts and ways of working with legal problems which are being disrupted by machines and ‘artificial intelligence’. The teaching on the module will raise students’ awareness of the commercial significance of artificial intelligence in an increasingly global, competitive and technology-driven legal services marketplace. Students with gain sufficient knowledge and experience of artificial intelligence and machine learning to understand the capacity of those technologies to support legal services, as well as the accompanying risks which regulators are concerned with. We aim to develop a disruptive, innovative mind-set in students that will enhance their future skills and employability to better appreciate and understand how the LawTech services of the future can be integrated within disruptive FinTech businesses.