Richard King
Bignon De Keyser
Successfully navigating the legal technology maze requires asking some important initial questions to assess readiness for change and inform the direction it should take.
Linda A. Thompson
The firm says the move to implement the OpenAI platform globally is a 'game-changer' that 'marks a new era for A&O and the legal industry'.
Stephanie Wilkins
For years, a lack of attorney e-discovery competence has been identified as the biggest e-discovery challenge that's not talked about enough. But if no one's willing to talk about the problem, how can the industry solve it?
Amy Guthrie
A magistrate in Colombia has authorized a hearing to take place in Meta's Horizon Workrooms, with participants set to wear virtual reality eyeglasses and interact via avatars.
Brad Kutner
"I spend most of my waking hours thinking about the regulation of these assets and I love it. I just wish the law was clearer so companies will know what is required to bring crypto products to market," said K&L Gates partner Andrew Hinkes.
Cassandre Coyer
Amid the waves of layoffs in Silicon Valley many Big Tech companies are still actively hiring AI talent. But that may not necessarily put the legal tech market at a disadvantage.
Alysa Austin
Dan Felz
Kim Peretti
Part One of a Two-Part Article Despite the steady growth of global AI adoption, there is no comprehensive federal legislation on AI in the United States. Instead, the U.S. has a patchwork of various current and proposed AI regulatory frameworks. It is critical for organizations looking to harness this novel technology to understand these frameworks and to prepare to operate in compliance with them.
This article is the first in a three-part series. You're at the entrance to a maze, with a sign overhead reading 'WELCOME TO LEGAL TECHNOLOGY'.
Isha Marathe
Helm360 is using Open AI's ChatGPT-3 technology to power its flagship chatbot Termi. However, given the generative AI's inaccuracies, the chatbot isn't meant to be client-facing.
A bold offer from artificial intelligence start-up DoNotPay of $1 million to any attorney who would allow the company's "robot lawyer" to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court has initiated a wave of skepticism and intrigue across the legal community.
While some companies looking to cut costs have targeted legal ops positions, experts warn that such an approach could backfire in the future.
Dr. Lance Eliot
Attorneys need to be aware of the full gamut of uses for generative AI in their legal practices, which is readily overlooked in the pell-mell reflexive rush to use this hottest AI for rather narrow or pinpoint applications.
The advanced AI recommends certain firms as well as lawyers from the likes of Wachtell, Sullivan & Cromwell and Gibson Dunn, but its knowledge is questionable, and it seems to have a thing against Kirkland.
Google accused Indian regulators of copying the EU's language in an antitrust ruling—but observers say there's nothing suspect about regulators following in each other's footsteps.
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