In the latest installment of our How It Works series, we explore EvenUp, a legal technology company leveraging AI to transform personal injury law. This 15-minute product demo focuses on a few of EvenUp’s just-released features,…
A State Bar Switches From Casemaker To Fastcase As A Member Benefit
The Mississippi Bar today announced that it is switching the research service it offers as a free benefit to its members from Casemaker to Fastcase. The switch will take effect for its more than 9,000 members on June 1.
“This new partnership allows us to support our members by providing free access…
New Survey Paints Picture of Innovation and Technology at Law Firms
Although law firms often talk about innovation, fewer than a third have actually tasked someone within the firm with the responsibility for driving innovation.
This post was a BlawgWorld Pick of the Week.
That is among the findings of a new survey, the 2018 Aderant Business of Law and Legal…
Number of AI Companies in Legal Grows 65% In Last Year
The number of artificial intelligence companies catering to the legal field has grown by 65 percent in the last year, from 40 to 66.
This finding is from the In-House Counsel’s LegalTech Buyer’s Guide 2018, published today by the contract review automation company LawGeex.
The increase in AI companies includes a…
Email Encryption No Longer Secure After Vulnerability Found
Update #2: The Washington Post has this: The Cybersecurity 202: Security community has its own encryption debate after discovery of new flaw.
Update: “Don’t panic,” is the message of an EFF post published subsequent to my post below, but avoid using PGP, at least temporarily until more is known. And computer security blogger
Friday Roundup: Online Tech CLE, Open-Source EDGAR, Blockchain ODR, Deploying AI
A roundup of the week’s news from the worlds of legal technology and innovation:
Suffolk’s online innovation courses OK’d for CLE. In a post here last October, I reported on a new online certification course in legal innovation and technology being launched by Suffolk University Law School in Boston. This week, Suffolk announced that the
Judicial Analytics Company Gavelytics Expands with New Rulings Database and Arbitrator Archive
When last we wrote about judicial analytics company Gavelytics on March 13, it was announcing a $3.2 million funding round to support development of new features and expansion into additional jurisdictions. Today, the first two of these new features roll out — a rulings database and an arbitrator archive.
As I…
Putting Justice Gorsuch to the Test of Three Legal Editing Programs
The jury of popular opinion is divided on the writing style of the newest justice on the Supreme Court. Slate pronounced Neil M. Gorsuch a terrible writer. But a forthcoming quantitative study of his published opinions concludes that he “does exceedingly well according to the standards of good writing that legal writing authorities…
A Second State Moves Closer to Mandating Technology Training for Lawyers
In 2016, Florida became the first state to mandate technology training for lawyers, when it adopted a rule requiring lawyers to complete three hours of CLE every three years “in approved technology programs.”
So far, no other state has followed suit. But now one has moved a giant step closer to following in Florida’s footsteps.…
New Survey Suggests Legal Tech Companies Confused About Marketing
Legal technology companies are confused about how to market and sell their products, concludes the inaugural Legal Tech Go-to-Market Report, conducted by legal PR and marketing firm Baretz+Brunelle. Ninety-seven percent of respondents in the survey believe the legal tech industry has no firm grasp of go-to-market strategy or, at best, only a scattered one.
In…
Moneyball for Lawyers: Interview with Lex Machina CEO Josh Becker
In the book, Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, Michael Lewis documented how the Oakland Athletics used analytics to build a competitive baseball team. In much the same way, lawyers are increasingly using analytics to get the upper hand in litigation and business development.
One of the companies that pioneered the…
In Legaltech, 2018 Could Be A Banner Year for the Big White Comfy Chair
Recently, at the annual meeting of the American Bankruptcy Institute on April 20 in Washington, D.C., I moderated a plenary panel, “Artificial Intelligence: Why It Matters To Your Future Bankruptcy Practice.” The principal organizer of that conference was Karim Guirguis, chief strategy and innovation officer at ABI. All of us on the panel…