It is urgent to make legal and ethical norms machine-consumable, and not simply machine-readable in order to promptly react to relevant changes, to correctly apply regulations to changed scenarios, to allow machine-to-machine dialogue with digital artefacts (e.g. IoT, Smart Cities, Transportation sector), to analyse the results and to take quick decisions for enhancing economy and the social community. If Parliaments define and adopt a theoretically-informed framework of the “Law as Platform”, government institutions and public administrations can save a significant amount of time in the implementation, avoiding a reasonable percentage of errors, monitoring the effects of the legal norms, correct unsuccessful prescriptions, develop integrated ecosystems with the digital infosphere entities and prepare the future interaction with robots, multi-agents, AI, blockchains, smart contracts. AI systems can also support legislative law-making in the deliberative phase and help produce better regulation avoiding mistakes and inconsistency. This approach saves companies’ money, reduces lawsuits and litigations, makes the compliance with the rule of law system more effective.