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In First for A U.S. Appeals Court, 5th U.S. Circuit Court Considers Rule Requiring Lawyers to Certify they Did Not Rely on AI to Create Filings

Above the Law - Technology

In what it appears would be a first for a federal circuit court, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is considering adoption of a rule change that would require lawyers and unrepresented litigants to provide a certification regarding their use of artificial intelligence in preparing court filings.

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Trellis Launches Trellis AI to Revolutionize Trial Court Litigation

Trellis.Law Blog

19, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Today, Trellis launched Trellis AI, a powerful new legal productivity platform designed for the complex needs of trial court litigation. LOS ANGELES, Nov.

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Justia CLE & Webinars | Breaking Down This Year’s Docket: Previewing the 2024–2025 Supreme Court Term

Justia Legal Marketing & Technology blog

In July, Professors Vikram Amar & Michael Dorf addressed many key decisions by the Supreme Court, discussing the ways they may have changed the legal landscape. Our trusted professors are now back again to provide an engaging dialogue as to what is on the docket for the upcoming Supreme Court Term. ET/11:00 a.m. credit hours.

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In A First for Law Practice Management Platforms, Clio Rolls Out An Integrated E-Filing Service in Texas

Above the Law - Technology

Last October, during its annual Clio Cloud Conference, the law practice management company Clio announced its plan to roll out an e-filing service, called Clio File, during 2024, starting with Texas, which would make it the first law practice management platform with built-in e-filing.

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Justia CLE & Webinars: Key Rulings From the 2023-2024 Supreme Court Term

Justia Legal Marketing & Technology blog

PT on Tuesday, July 16, 2024. He is also the author of several books and over 60 articles in leading law reviews, focusing on constitutional law, federal courts, and civil procedure. Michael Dorf is a Professor of Law at Cornell Law School, with a focus on constitutional law and federal courts. ET/11:00 a.m. More Questions?

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Another Court Finds an “Enforceable Browsewrap.” MAKE IT STOP–Hawkins v. CMG

Eric Goldman

The court says this implementation isn’t a sign-in-wrap because the CMG terms lacked a call-to-action: “the login through Facebook screen never informed Plaintiff that acceptance of a separate agreement was required before she could access the service, which is the defining feature of a sign-in wrap agreement.”

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Section 230 Applies to Publication of Court Documents–Medina v. Microsoft

Eric Goldman

Microsoft’s filings made some unredacted disclosures about Medina that were repeated in an unredacted court opinion, and those documents appeared on several websites that publish court documents. He then sued the court document repository websites (and other defendants) for defamation, false advertising, and more.

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