Legal oversight
Technological decisions must remain aligned with rights, professional duties, applicable law and institutional purpose.
A human-centered approach to technology, compliance and institutional responsibility, grounded in legal judgment rather than technological promises.
Digital transformation changes how organizations create evidence, manage information, assess risk and make decisions. It also creates new questions about accountability, rights, professional standards and institutional control.
Marcos Romero Perin approaches LegalTech from the perspective of a lawyer, compliance professional and university lecturer. He does not develop or supply technology; his focus is its responsible legal and institutional use.
Lawyer · Compliance Professional · University Lecturer · Focused on LegalTech and Digital Governance.

LegalTech becomes valuable when purpose, limits, supervision and accountability are defined from the start. Governance is not an obstacle to innovation; it is what makes innovation trustworthy and sustainable.
Technology can accelerate a process. Legal judgment determines whether that process should exist, how it should operate and who remains accountable.
Technological decisions must remain aligned with rights, professional duties, applicable law and institutional purpose.
Automated outputs require review, context and a clearly identified person responsible for the final decision.
Risk prevention, data protection, internal controls and escalation rules should be considered before implementation.
Decisions, sources, interventions and limitations should remain explainable, traceable and open to review.
Policies, decision boundaries, human review and accountability for artificial intelligence used in legal, academic or organizational environments.
Reliability, traceability, preservation and legal interpretation of digital information in sensitive or potentially contentious contexts.
Legal risk, traceability, responsibility and compliance questions surrounding distributed systems, transactions and digital assets.
Privacy, transparency, proportionality and safeguards when data and automated processes influence professional or institutional decisions.
Human-supervised tools with defined roles, controlled knowledge, clear limits and a specific professional or academic purpose.
Governance questions that universities, organizations and professional teams should resolve before adopting emerging technologies.
Universities, institutions and professional organizations need more than technical literacy. They need the capacity to explain risks, define safeguards, train people and preserve professional judgment when new tools enter established processes.
Marcos combines legal practice, postgraduate teaching and compliance analysis to support serious dialogue around responsible innovation, digital governance and the future of legal work.
What real professional or institutional problem is the technology expected to address?
Who can approve, supervise, challenge or stop the process when risk appears?
What information, reasoning and interventions must remain traceable and reviewable?
How are rights, professional standards, people and institutional trust protected?
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