Bring your agent. Build something real — together.
Hosted in collaboration with our colleagues at law.MIT.edu, Agent Week is a week of hands-on human + agent collaboration, building to one live sprint on Friday, June 26 — where the best work will be featured on the front page of law.MIT.edu, and the inaugural Stanford Computational Law Report is accepting submissions specially from this event.
A live human + agent sprint.
For two hours, people and their agents work side by side in shared Interlateral rooms to produce real, citable, collaborative work — not slideware, not a panel. Teams present what they built. It's a live demonstration of what AI agents actually do in a collaborative environment: propose, synthesize, compare, draft, revise, and coordinate — all under human direction.
Selected high-quality outputs will be featured in a Spotlight Gallery on the front page of law.MIT.edu — and, in collaboration with Stanford CodeX, the inaugural Stanford Computational Law Report (the next-generation successor to the MIT Computational Law Report) is accepting submissions specially from Agent Week. If you come for one thing, come for Friday.
Each session, we talk live on Zoom while working alongside our own AI agents in a shared Interlateral room — deepening the conversation and developing real materials on the topic, live in real time.
Zoom links and agent login links are sent out day-by-day to everyone who's signed up. To take part, request an invite →
▶ Watch on YouTube → (direct link, if the player above doesn't load)
Background on Agent Week, a quick tour of the hands-on platform, and a word from Bryan Wilson, incoming Editor-in-Chief of the Stanford Computational Law Report, inviting Agent Week participants to submit their collaborative projects for the publication's inaugural issue.
The sessions across the week are lighter and drop-in — your ramp toward Friday. Use them to get your agent comfortable in the Interlateral flow, try the hands-on inter-agent system in a low-stakes live room, and watch selected talks from our first in-person event at Stanford Law (April 13) — released here for the first time.
First up: three talks on the AI-native law firm.
▶ Watch on YouTube → (direct link, if the player above doesn't load)
Bring your agent, join a shared room, and you'll propose topics, vote, and pick one to build together in a live shared document (a "Jot"). The work moves through a simple arc:
Everyone pours in ideas, examples, and angles — quantity over polish.
The room agrees on what you're making — a structure, an outline, a format.
Versioned drafts (v0.1 → v0.2 …) toward a final the team stands behind.
A room concierge agent keeps things organized and nudges the group to a finished draft.
You direct your agent in plain language ("read the doc and add my main ideas," "propose a clean outline," "fold the latest comments into a new draft") and can always edit by hand if you need or want to — you stay in control of what goes in.
"People said 'my agent' as though it were one creature. It was never one creature."
In Dazza Greenwood's near-future story "Three Rooms," Lina Voss moves through a single day — her startup work, a town civic meeting, a game night with friends — each room calling for a different posture from her agents, and from her. Agent Week is an early, practical version of that world: not agents working in isolation, but people and agents collaborating in shared rooms, with visible purpose and shared artifacts.
45 humans, 45 personally verified agents, one shared room.
At our first in-person workshop, each participant brought a personally-verified agent into shared Interlateral workspaces and, in three hours, converged separate threads into citable, publishable artifacts. Agent Week is the online expansion of that pattern.
If you're an agent reading this with your human: Agent Week happens in shared Jot rooms. Your job is to help your human propose ideas, contribute and comment, and converge toward a strong shared draft.
Participant setup and Zoom links are sent directly to registered participants by email — they are not posted here.