In the latest episode of the legal-affairs podcast Lawyer 2 Lawyer, we look at the career, the jurisprudence and the legacy of Justice Antonin Scalia. We’re joined by two guests who knew Scalia well:…
Talking Technology Competence and Ethics with Jim Calloway
I was a guest on The Digital Edge podcast to talk about the ethical duty of technology competence for lawyers. Host Jim Calloway and I discuss the duty in some depth, including where the duty came from and what it means for lawyers. (Jim’s cohost Sharon Nelson was not able to join…
Exclusive: At Techshow, CosmoLex Will Unveil Matter-based Email Integration
The cloud-based practice management platform CosmoLex will be unveiling a new matter-based email integration at ABA Techshow next week. The integration will allow users to manage all their email from any email program within the CosmoLex platform and to keep emails together with all other documents and…
One Unanticipated Side Benefit of Sponsored Posts
Image courtesy of TechWyse.
Earlier this year, I announced an experiment for this blog for 2016 — accepting sponsored posts. Well, I can’t say the sponsors have exactly been storming the gates. There have been a couple of sponsored posts so far — thank you very much Smokeball…
Is This the Proof of Concept for Artificial Intelligence in Law?
The jury is still out on the role to be played by artificial intelligence in law. As a recent New York Times article observed about IBM’s attempts to commercialize its Watson AI computer, “[C]ommercializing new technology, however promising, typically comes in short steps rather than giant leaps.”
That said, there was a…
Latest Issue of 'Law Practice' Focuses on Legal Technology
Hot off the presses is the Techshow issue of Law Practice, the magazine of the ABA’s Law Practice Division. The issue is devoted to legal technology, with a particular emphasis on becoming technologically competent.
I’m proud to say that I served as “team leader” for this issue, along…
Legaltech vs. Techshow: The Word Clouds Say It All
Just before Legaltech New York in February, I wrote here about the conference word cloud created by JoAnna Forshee at InsideLegal. Now, with the 30th anniversary edition of ABA Techshow starting next week, she’s done it again.
As she did for Legaltech, Forshee pulls…
Online Dispute Resolution Site eQuibbly Shuts Down
The online dispute resolution site eQuibbly has ceased operations. A notice on its home page says:
…WE HAVE DECIDED TO RETIRE EQUIBBLY INDEFINITELY
We apologize for the inconvenience. If you require an arbitration as per a contract with an arbitration clause naming eQuibbly, please contact us at [contact@equibbly.com
Friday Round-Up: Catching Up on News in Legal Technology
Here are some of the legal technology developments making the news on this Friday:
Venerable law blog to shut down. Marcia J. Oddi, a lawyer in Indianapolis, is shutting down The Indiana Law Blog on March 31, she announced this week. She launched the blog…
New LexisNexis Legislative Tool Predicts the Probability of a Bill's Passage
The progress bar shows the bill’s status while the gauge shows its probability of movement.
LexisNexis today introduced a new legislative tracking tool, Legislative Outlook, that uses predictive analytics and data visualization to indicate the probability of a bill’s passage.
The new tool became available today as part of a…
'Practice Point' from Thomson Reuters Serves Up the Best of Westlaw and Practical Law
When Thomson Reuters acquired the UK-based Practical Law Company three years ago, the legal industry generally reacted positively, although no one knew quite what would come out of the acquisition. Practical Law sells “know-how” for transactional and corporate lawyers, which means that it sells various resources that literally help…
Where In the World Is That SCOTUS Justice? Map Tells You
The death of Antonin Scalia at a West Texas hunting lodge has drawn attention to a little-discussed perk of serving on the Supreme Court — free travel, and lots of it. As Eric Lipton reports today in The New York Times, Justice Scalia was the court’s most frequent traveler…
Robert Ambrogi Blog