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How Can I Get Feedback on Reddit/Elsewhere

May 28, 2026219💬original ↗
Question / Tech Stack Advice

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# [](https://www.reddit.com/r/legaltech/?f=flair_name%3A%22Question%20%2F%20Tech%20Stack%20Advice%22)I’m a lawyer (graduated in '21), ex biglaw and fed law clerk. Two technical cofounders and I built a trial advocacy simulator. Users run direct and cross examination against AI playing Judge, opposing counsel, and witnesses, with objections and rulings in real time. We have a working product and our hypothesis is that this could be used for training (law school trial ad courses or law firm training curriculum) or to simulate upcoming proceedings, like your first depo or hearing. I have deliberately omitted the name of the company and a link to our YouTube demo video to avoid triggering this sub's anti-self-promotion rule. I understand other people have used Reddit to get this kind of market insight, but I don't quite understand how give that many subreddits, like [r/lawschool](https://www.reddit.com/r/lawschool/) and others, have similar anti-promoting/soliciting rules. We're not trying to sell anything, but we need feedback beyond my network of colleagues and lawyer-friends. We want law students and lawyers to whom I have no connection to try this product (free ofc) and provide honest feedback. Any advice on how/where to do get interested users/feedback would be very much appreciated-thanks in advance!