Isha Marathe
Proliferating data types are not a new e-discovery hassle, but as opposing counsel makes more specific demands for data sources an organization uses, attorneys will face larger challenges.
While seeing generative AI becoming an essential technology in the legal market, DLA Piper's new chief data scientist Bennett Borden also noted that human review of AI outputs is likely to become more and more complex in the coming days.
It's early days for generative AI, and before the inevitable flood of GPT-powered tools hits the legal tech market, experts believe users and vendors can take steps to prevent pitfalls that plagued previous popular technologies.
At a webinar Legaltech News hosted on the future of generative AI in the legal industry, panelists said GPT-4 is set to change the way law is practiced—but the technology's evolution might come in unexpected ways.
While Australian automation provider Josef is using OpenAI's latest large language model, the trainable data the new tool accesses is intentionally kept narrow, which Josef says helps avoid inaccurate or irrelevant outputs like those seen in ChatGPT.
As companies' data volumes grow, Jon Monheit, the lead e-discovery program manager at Microsoft, discusses how to manage increasingly complex privacy and e-discovery responsibilities.
Industry insiders have warned that legal ops teams might be targeted for layoffs. Emily Miniger, the managing director of legal transformation solutions at Epiq and Legalweek 2023 speaker, said she worries that might be true. But pre-emptive measures are out there.
An update on the legal tech market's past few weeks, from product launches to new tech integrations.
From ChatGPT to the metaverse, legal professionals are diving head first into figuring out how these new innovations fit in the market.
While Big Tech and large organizations are aware of additional cybersecurity responsibilities they have, with President Biden's latest National Cybersecurity Strategy, failing to meet those responsibilities is likely to come with legal repercussions.
After AI chatbot Replika lost its privileges to collect data on Italian users, attorneys say the matter highlights a real risk for startups who don't pay close attention to the EU's various online age-verification rules.
From legal tech coders in war-torn Ukraine to judges who have jumped through hoops to get where they are, women have made remarkable achievements in legal tech.
Coming on board from a career as an IP attorney and a fintech GC, Brie Buchanan is taking on the role of VP and chief legal officer at legal tech startup Calloquy. She talked about the importance of tech competency for a successful legal career and more.
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