Remove 2012 Remove Legal AI Remove Legal research
article thumbnail

The Legal AI Adoption Curve: Where Your Law Firm Stands (And What to Do Next)

Clio

Its a question youve likely been grappling with more and more lately as you hear about your peers adopting AI: Where does your firm stand on legal AI adoption? Increasingly, AI is giving legal professionals access to new knowledge and capabilities that were unthinkable just a few years ago.

article thumbnail

Ep 287: From Ravel Cofounder to Knowable CEO, Nik Reed Has Learned that Building Quality AI for Legal Takes A Lot of Hard Work

LawNext podcast

On todays LawNext, Reed joins host Bob Ambrogi for a conversation that explores what makes legal AI actually work well in practice. After LexisNexis acquired Ravel in 2017, Reed moved into strategic product management there, and then joined Knowable in 2019 to lead its product research and development.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

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. And that has been impressive.

Legal AI 130
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. And that has been impressive.

article thumbnail

My 20 Most-Read Posts of 2022

LawSites

But this year, they seem to span the gamut of topics I cover, from analytics to artificial intelligence, from legal ethics to legal research, from new companies starting up to established companies shutting down, from products designed for litigation to products embroiled in litigation. Here’s What Happened.