Compliance.ai partners with USF Law School on regtech platform. (Photo credit: Succo / Pixabay)

Compliance.ai Partners with University of San Francisco Law School on RegTech Platform

In a recent partnership, regtech startup Compliance.ai has granted free access to its machine learning-powered compliance database to all law students at the University of San Francisco School of Law.

This is the first such collaboration by the young company with an academic institution, which can now offer scholars the ability to search through its the wealth of information in its regulation platform and earn money by helping to “crowdsource” the document review and categorization process that helps structure the information within the repository.

By becoming what the San Francisco-based firm calls “regulatory heroes,” aspiring lawyers can bring in extra income for themselves and help improve the platform as contributors who can “help classify, rank, and curate regulatory content to enhance the results of the AI-driven platform,” said Compliance.ai in a statement.

In time, machine learning principles will increasingly build upon the foundation of information and data already within the system to make it more searchable, usable, and connected.

Johanna Hartwig, assistant dean at the USF School of Law, called the platform an “impressive and dynamic new tool.” She says that it represents a useful opportunity for law students to have more information at their fingertips and learn about how tech is impacting the regulation world.

“This experience helps pave the path for students interested in launching careers in increasingly in-demand industries, including compliance, finance, and banking,” said Hartwig.

In addition to this announcement, the regulation startup recently launched a weekly regulatory update feature on its website. This consists of two bulletins, one that looks at includes Broken down into both an agency category, which focuses on regulatory news emanating from governmental organizations, and a topic category that focuses more on subject matters.

(Photo credit: Succo / Pixabay

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