article thumbnail

Thomas Suh and Ken Block on How LegalMation is Revolutionizing Litigation Efficiency (TGIR Ep. 222)

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

The company provides AI-powered tools to help litigators automate repetitive tasks and work more efficiently. The conversation focuses on LegalMation’s products, overcoming resistance to adopting new legal tech, and predictions for the future evolution of legal service delivery. Thanks for having me.

Litigator 147
article thumbnail

Deploying Cutting-Edge Legal AI: Travers Smith’s Cautious, But Open-source Approach. (TGIR Ep. 216)

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

They co-authored a paper on subtle errors in legal AI. Travers Smith is exploring AI for tasks like contract review but not yet for work product. This wide-ranging discussion provides an inside look at how one forward-thinking firm is advancing legal AI in a prudent and ethical manner. We’d love to hear from you.

Legal AI 130
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

Legal AI: A Lawyer’s New Best Friend?

TechLaw Crossroads

I recently had a chance to hear Richard Susskind speak on AI in law and, as always, found his comments perceptive and spot on. Susskind spoke as part of a series of lectures entitled Legal Tech Essentials 2022. The other group—the sky is falling group—focuses on the possibility that robots will soon replace lawyers.

article thumbnail

Projections for Legal Tech and Innovations in 2024 (TGIR Ep. 232)

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

In this episode, Marlene Gebauer interviews attendees at two recent legal tech conferences – the TLTF Summit and the Legal AI Pathfinder’s Assembly. She asks them about the biggest impacts they foresee AI and other innovations having on the legal industry in 2024. Marlene Gebauer 20:17 Melina Higgins is up next.

article thumbnail

Deploying Cutting-Edge Legal AI: Travers Smith’s Cautious, But Open-source Approach. (TGIR Ep. 216)

Legal Tech Monitor

They co-authored a paper on subtle errors in legal AI. Travers Smith is exploring AI for tasks like contract review but not yet for work product. This wide-ranging discussion provides an inside look at how one forward-thinking firm is advancing legal AI in a prudent and ethical manner. We’d love to hear from you.

article thumbnail

Thoughts on Promises and Challenges of AI in Legal after Yesterday’s AI Summit at Harvard Law School

Legal Tech Monitor

Armed with AI, pro se litigants could overwhelm the courts, so the courts need to be prepared to respond in kind. Generative AI could lower the hurdles and the costs for pro se litigants to bring their grievances to court.

Law 52
article thumbnail

Pablo Arredondo on the One-Year Anniversary of CoCounsel

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

And while I think some of the most exciting use cases for this technology is uploading your own documents, right, we were talking before we started about, you know, pointing it at all of the documents in your litigation, the transcripts, the correspondence, discovery, etc. That is at the heart of litigation. It was tough.