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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
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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.

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

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

And then kind of looking at, you know, the typical story that we hear of a lot of tech companies, as they, you know, identify a discrete problem, but I want to twist it just a little bit. And that is, you know, sometimes the change, especially within a legal department or law firm starts with identifying what the problem actually is.

Litigator 147
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Richard Tromans on the Future of Legal Innovation and The Legal Innovators California Conference (TGIR Ep. 201)

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

Because that was like the first way that legal AI, right, mostly driven by what you might call natural language processing, or at least the first blush, the first version of natural language processing. Um, it’s been writing the book, but at the moment, all I’m doing is promoting my my conference. We’d love to hear from you.

Law firm 162
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Colin Lachance on Jurisage’s MyJr and How He’s Looking at AI to Assist in the Synthesis and Reading of Legal Cases (TGIR Ep. 190)

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

And that was there was a site that basically took the GPT and allowed it digest books. And then it allowed for a chat interface with the, with the book itself. So GPT is not restricted by a database, the book version that you’re talking about, is restricted. The answer has to come from within that book.

Case law 130
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Guest Post: The Caselaw Access Project — Then, Now, Tomorrow

LawSites

The effect has been to stifle innovation and competition in the field of legal information and, I would argue, to impede justice and the rule of law. million pages from 39,796 books and converted it all into machine-readable text files. Case law books waiting to be scanned. We didn’t have all the books we needed.

Court 134
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Richard Tromans on the Future of Legal Innovation and The Legal Innovators California Conference (TGIR Ep. 201)

Legal Tech Monitor

Because that was like the first way that legal AI, right, mostly driven by what you might call natural language processing, or at least the first blush, the first version of natural language processing. Um, it’s been writing the book, but at the moment, all I’m doing is promoting my my conference. We’d love to hear from you.