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I wanted to talk about some of the things that we hear law firms are doing now with generative AI to help improve the delivery of legal services. So what do you see as some of the potential benefits and pitfalls of using AI for such tasks as drafting and reviewing contracts, or conducting legalresearch?
He became interested in the future of legal education and how artificial intelligence will affect the profession, which led him to co-found Blue J , a legal technology company in Toronto. On the other hand, Abdi Aidid practiced as a commercial litigator in New York before becoming the Vice President of LegalResearch at Blue J.
Marlene Gebauer 1:39 is really critical to sort of hear from your customers in terms of what’s working, what’s not what their clients are saying, you know, in order to make smart decisions. Although we definitely are a scrappy startup. I think that is a definitely a core mission. What isn’t. Here, test this.
Legal assistants may perform tasks such as sorting or filing documents, preparing appointments and calendars, including trail schedules, and contacting clients and all other parties to lawsuits. A legal assistant may also help with legalresearch , writing legal papers, and more, not whatever is required.
So but I hear we have another Schwartz. So that was terrifying to honestly, to walk into that final hearing, you get sort of like one shot. But there was a moment during the hearing where, you know, I pointed him to one of the pieces of evidence that I had written about in the brief it was good declaration by a medical professional.
AI is getting proficient at assisting various legal services such as contract management, legal predictions, eDiscovery, and sooner or later courtroom hearings. AI applications are getting to the roots of legal tech and redefining the definition of the legal profession. From Past to Present!
There is definitely demand for the AI Insider Program with over 3,000 law firms already signed up. And I think probably pointed at the legal market, more so than technology changes typically are. Jeff Pfeifer 16:06 Definitely. Pfeifer emphasizes LexisNexis’ focus on responsible AI.
If ever there was an industry ripe for disruption, legal tech, and specifically legalresearch, is it. caselaw and helps us avoid issues others have run into in trying to use AI for legalresearch. solves a few problems that current legal search engines do not. What makes you unique or innovative?
He became interested in the future of legal education and how artificial intelligence will affect the profession, which led him to co-found Blue J , a legal technology company in Toronto. On the other hand, Abdi Aidid practiced as a commercial litigator in New York before becoming the Vice President of LegalResearch at Blue J.
So there was definitely a lot of interest in it. And so I can totally understand that they came here to sort of hear what other people had to say, because, you know, you do see some firms that have sort of that are forging ahead, but I think there’s there’s a lot of folks and firms that that aren’t quite sure what to do with it yet.
Well, first of all, Colin, before we dive into some of the really cool stuff that that you’re doing there at Jurisage, give us a little background on how you found yourself co founding yet another legal tech company, they’re in Canada, this time Jurisage. But I think we’re definitely and you were right. We would love to hear from you.
Harvard professor Jonathan Zittrain and l were sitting down with Daniel Lewis and Nik Reed , the founders of a legalresearch startup named Ravel Law, along with lawyers from Harvard’s Office of General Counsel, Debevoise & Plimpton and Gundersen Dettmer. So we did research and made one. We decided not to.
And the one thing I told them is this is not a legalresearch, pure legalresearch tool. With a more technical legal version, it was switched with a more easy to understand version from a different set of common law. We’re not going to touch this for legal reset. And if you if you do you better check them.
Surprisingly, desired use cases are fairly consistent globally – both simple legal tasks as well as more advanced legalresearch and drafting. And since this is new to everyone, we are definitely training our users on what constitutes a good prompt. We’d love to hear from you. In Lexis plus AI. Keeping it simple.
I wanted to talk about some of the things that we hear law firms are doing now with generative AI to help improve the delivery of legal services. So what do you see as some of the potential benefits and pitfalls of using AI for such tasks as drafting and reviewing contracts, or conducting legalresearch?
Yeah, Paulina Grnarova 22:41 I was gonna say, We’ve definitely seen some some great examples of people playing around with the models, which helps them kind of understand the limitations of the models and the things that you can do with the models. If you enjoy the show, share it with a colleague, we’d love to hear from you.
Marlene Gebauer 1:39 is really critical to sort of hear from your customers in terms of what’s working, what’s not what their clients are saying, you know, in order to make smart decisions. Although we definitely are a scrappy startup. I think that is a definitely a core mission. What isn’t. Here, test this.
There is definitely demand for the AI Insider Program with over 3,000 law firms already signed up. And I think probably pointed at the legal market, more so than technology changes typically are. Jeff Pfeifer 16:06 Definitely. Pfeifer emphasizes LexisNexis’ focus on responsible AI.
So there was definitely a lot of interest in it. And so I can totally understand that they came here to sort of hear what other people had to say, because, you know, you do see some firms that have sort of that are forging ahead, but I think there’s there’s a lot of folks and firms that that aren’t quite sure what to do with it yet.
Harvard professor Jonathan Zittrain and l were sitting down with Daniel Lewis and Nik Reed , the founders of a legalresearch startup named Ravel Law, along with lawyers from Harvard’s Office of General Counsel, Debevoise & Plimpton and Gundersen Dettmer. So we did research and made one. We decided not to.
And the one thing I told them is this is not a legalresearch, pure legalresearch tool. With a more technical legal version, it was switched with a more easy to understand version from a different set of common law. We’re not going to touch this for legal reset. And if you if you do you better check them.
Surprisingly, desired use cases are fairly consistent globally – both simple legal tasks as well as more advanced legalresearch and drafting. And since this is new to everyone, we are definitely training our users on what constitutes a good prompt. We’d love to hear from you. In Lexis plus AI. Keeping it simple.
If ever there was an industry ripe for disruption, legal tech, and specifically legalresearch, is it. caselaw and helps us avoid issues others have run into in trying to use AI for legalresearch. solves a few problems that current legal search engines do not. What makes you unique or innovative?
So this week we have a just star studded episode was some absolute Yeah, we got some power players in the legal technology industry, especially when it comes to practical uses of products like OpenAI’s GPT-4.for for everything from legalresearch to how to scope your legal work. So they’re using it for legalresearch.
Current useful applications center on legalresearch, brainstorming, administrative tasks – not mission-critical legal analysis. Greg Lambert 2:49 I hear not all of that was HyperDraft. And, you know, are you seeing that, that there’s some that kind of have some definite concrete use cases? So that’s good.
This helps inform negotiations with vendors to find cost savings on research contracts. He notes legalresearch tools will inevitably integrate more tightly into lawyers’ daily workflows in the future. This allows Harbor to provide end-to-end solutions for legal organizations.
And they were more than happy to hear that. So I, you know, I don’t think you necessarily see that in every community, especially in legal but but it definitely helps us Marlene Gebauer 8:38 True, true. Dorna Moini 18:44 Yeah, definitely. And I know people don’t love to hear that. So Dorna, shifting to you.
We also discovered alternative legal careers that don’t necessarily involve the practice of law. We heard about proposed regulatory changes in states like Arizona, Utah, and California that are aimed at closing the access to justice gap and potentially widening the definition of legal practice.
This helps inform negotiations with vendors to find cost savings on research contracts. He notes legalresearch tools will inevitably integrate more tightly into lawyers’ daily workflows in the future. This allows Harbor to provide end-to-end solutions for legal organizations.
He also discusses the difficulty in training new lawyers as LLMs make some tasks too easy, the coming market efficiencies in legal services, and the strategic curation of knowledge that will still require human judgment. We’re definitely at kind of what I think of as, as a very true MVP state. We’d love to hear from you.
So this week we have a just star studded episode was some absolute Yeah, we got some power players in the legal technology industry, especially when it comes to practical uses of products like OpenAI’s GPT-4.for for everything from legalresearch to how to scope your legal work. So they’re using it for legalresearch.
And they were more than happy to hear that. So I, you know, I don’t think you necessarily see that in every community, especially in legal but but it definitely helps us Marlene Gebauer 8:38 True, true. Dorna Moini 18:44 Yeah, definitely. And I know people don’t love to hear that. So Dorna, shifting to you.
Current useful applications center on legalresearch, brainstorming, administrative tasks – not mission-critical legal analysis. Greg Lambert 2:49 I hear not all of that was HyperDraft. And, you know, are you seeing that, that there’s some that kind of have some definite concrete use cases? So that’s good.
He also discusses the difficulty in training new lawyers as LLMs make some tasks too easy, the coming market efficiencies in legal services, and the strategic curation of knowledge that will still require human judgment. We’re definitely at kind of what I think of as, as a very true MVP state. We’d love to hear from you.
The natural language processing has found its way into many, many, many products from eDiscovery, to due diligence to legalresearch, litigation, analytics and prediction, all types of legal tech tool, but it hasn’t been absolutely transformative. Greg Lambert 18:37 It definitely feels like real change. Thanks, Jerry.
The natural language processing has found its way into many, many, many products from eDiscovery, to due diligence to legalresearch, litigation, analytics and prediction, all types of legal tech tool, but it hasn’t been absolutely transformative. Greg Lambert 18:37 It definitely feels like real change. Thanks, Jerry.
Because I can hear my, my IT security guy screaming right now. So, you know, what are some of the examples of complex legalresearch questions that the search composer can simplify that, you know, lawyers and maybe more casual users struggle with? Greg Lambert 32:04 It’s definitely a growth industry.
Because I can hear my, my IT security guy screaming right now. So, you know, what are some of the examples of complex legalresearch questions that the search composer can simplify that, you know, lawyers and maybe more casual users struggle with? Greg Lambert 32:04 It’s definitely a growth industry.
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