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AI isn't replacing lawyers, but lawyers who effectively leverage AI will increasingly outpace those who don't.
Jens Petry and Tom Gassmann of Squire Patton Boggs explore the extent to which AI can play a role in dispute resolution, ...
AI adoption is transforming legal practices The latest report reveals that AI usage in law firms has skyrocketed, with 79% of legal professionals now incorporating AI tools into their daily work ...
Nicholas Lieberknecht of Atheria Law discusses lawyers' professional duties and best practices in using AI, as well as the ...
Lawyers' duty of competence now includes a component not widely discussed until recently—the use of artificial intelligence (AI) tools in the practice of law. The New York City Bar Association ...
The conversation around AI in legal practice has fundamentally shifted. We're no longer debating if AI will transform legal work, but how we implement it effectively.After 25 years navigating the ...
Artificial intelligence leverages the work of good lawyers today; tomorrow, however, it may transform that entire legal profession in ways that are not yet foreseeable.
Analysis Navigating AI in Legal Practice: A Road Map for In-House Counsel Deploying Gen AI in these use cases need not raise the prospect of a threat to legal jobs, two contributors explained in a ...
Looking ahead to 2024 (and beyond), AI is set to become an indispensable part of legal practice — it will soon become as vital to the legal community as LexisNexis and Westlaw.
Artificial intelligence (AI)'s emergence and stunning popularity in the legal sphere raises the question of whether it's ethical for lawyers to use AI tools in their practices.
The EU’s General-Purpose AI Code of Practice is intended to guide AI developers in complying with the EU AI Act.
The AI RMF is a structure to identify, assess, and mitigate AI risks throughout the tools’ life cycles with key principles, methodologies, and practices to develop effective AI governance ...