Rhys Dipshan
The first Legalweek conference after OpenAI's ChatGPT and other LLM hit the mainstream is sure to be a seminal event. Legaltech News roundups offer insights from the conference, from what we've seen, heard and reported on throughout the day.
Legalweek 2023's annual judges debate kicked off on Wednesday, with four current and retired federal judges performing mock trails centering around some of the most challenging e-discovery issues of the day.
A Legalweek 2023 panel looks how the data privacy landscape in the U.S., U.K. and around the globe will likely evolve in the months ahead.
A new survey by LexisNexis found that many lawyers are aware of, and have used, generative AI tools. But many also have mixed feelings about what this growing technology means for the legal market.
A quick rundown of some of the biggest legal tech news that came in over the past weeks, days and hours, before the start of Legalweek 2023 in New York.
DISCO's vice president of product strategy Katie Debord, who joined the e-discovery provider last year from Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, has first hand knowledge about what makes legal tech purchases stick—and what law firms and legal tech providers don't understand each other.
Stephanie Wilkins
A guide to the key terms you need to know and understand when discussing AI.
While a worst-case-scenario was avoided after the FDIC backstopped SVB's deposits, the impact of the bank's demise will likely reverberate across the legal tech market, which has numerous ties to SVB, for weeks and months to come.
Co-founded by LegalZoom's Brian Liu, Overture Law looks to leverage an invite-only membership together with billing and collection automation technology to empower attorneys to ethically share fees with one another.
The CLM provider, which has offices in both India and the U.S. will leverage the investment towards product development and expansion in the North American market.
While some legal tech providers are releasing GPT-3.5 in specific use cases, and with disclaimers, others see it as too risky an endeavor, and are content instead to wait on the next generation of AI language models.
Alexsei CEO and founder Mark Doble believes that large language models (LLMs) like GPT-3.5 may be soon reach their limits, though he sees much potential in combining LLMs with more legal-specific AI models.
While legal tech providers are steadily releasing tools leveraging GPT-3.5, even innovative law firms who regularly develop legal tech may have a challenging time following suit.
Page 2 of 3