Remove Hearing Remove Judge Remove Magazine
article thumbnail

AI and Beyond: Key Trends at ABA TECHSHOW 2025

Lawyerist

For 2025, attendees get to experience a new venue, dig deeper into AI tools, and hear from keynote speaker Cory Doctorow. Doctorow writes for magazines, websites, and newspapers. Having reached 40 years old, firmly into middle age, ABA TECHSHOW shows it still has some tricks up its sleeves. For 2025, the show moves south, literally.

article thumbnail

Aliza Shatzman

Colin S. Levy

I was told I would develop a lifelong mentor/mentee relationship with the judge for whom I clerked, and that the position would confer only professional benefits. I began my clerkship in August 2019 and, beginning just weeks in, the judge began to harass me and discriminate against me because of my gender. I decided to clerk in D.C.

Judge 119
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

LTRC Roundtable Discussion: ChatGPT

Law Technology Today

You can’t turn around without hearing about ChatGPT and Open.ai You can judge for yourself what you think of the quality of those responses, but the tool was very easy to use. RT: I’ve used it to help me write an upcoming Future Proofing column in Law Practice magazine. these days. I AM READY TO TEST THE WATERS.

article thumbnail

Empowerment Of Women in the Legal Profession – Dana Denis-Smith – S6E23

Legally Speaking

There you are listeners, you can hear that. 18:35 Dana Denis-Smith: A very simply a photograph in my husband’s alumni magazine. And it to be honest, he always opens all the post and all the magazines and everything. And I liked them because we always have blind judging. 05:11 Dana Denis-Smith: Challenge accepted.

article thumbnail

Lawmatics and The Innocence Center Partner Up to Improve Access to Justice

Lawmatics

So if you're ever in another state or you hear of other innocence organizations that are called the Innocence Project, they just licensed that name from the New York Innocence Project. The judge said at the time of trial, when the jury came back that had I been able to decide this case, I would've found you not guilty.