article thumbnail

The Future of Legal Tech: How Technology Is Transforming the Business of Law

MatterSuite

Here are some of the key technologies shaping the legal industry: Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning Legal Research: AI-powered platforms, like ROSS, use natural language processing (NLP) and machine learning. It does the work more quickly and accurately than traditional research methods.

article thumbnail

Technology for Lawyers: Empowering the Legal Profession in the Digital Age

CaseFox

Advanced e-discovery tools and software help lawyers sift through this data, identifying relevant evidence, and streamlining the discovery process. Through machine learning algorithms, e-discovery platforms can quickly identify patterns and connections in data. This assists legal teams in building stronger cases.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Time to Vote! Pick the 15 Finalists to Compete At Startup Alley at ABA TECHSHOW 2023

LawSites

We’re an eDiscovery company building a new product: FlexFile, a SAAS that gives lawyers the power to easily gather and convert any kind of digital evidence. This is in addition to being a single source, easy to use solution, enabling more persuasive advocacy through digital evidence presentation.

article thumbnail

The Rise of “Post-Truth” Litigation: ALM’s Isha Marathe on How Deep Fakes Threaten the Legal System (TGIR Ep. 209)

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

E-discovery professionals are on the front lines of detecting deep fakes used as evidence, according to Marathe. However, they currently only have limited tools and methods to authenticate digital evidence and determine if it is real or AI-generated. And the deep comes from deep learning, which is a form of machine learning.

Litigator 147
article thumbnail

The Rise of “Post-Truth” Litigation: ALM’s Isha Marathe on How Deep Fakes Threaten the Legal System (TGIR Ep. 209)

Legal Tech Monitor

E-discovery professionals are on the front lines of detecting deep fakes used as evidence, according to Marathe. However, they currently only have limited tools and methods to authenticate digital evidence and determine if it is real or AI-generated. And the deep comes from deep learning, which is a form of machine learning.