* Final Fantasy XIII takes the “final” part too far? [San Francisco Weekly]
* L.A. judge didn’t inhale marijuana dispensaries’ arguments. [Los Angeles Times]
* The too-hot-for-Citibank plaintiff is now in hot water at JP Morgan Chase. [New York Daily News]
AI Is Reshaping Legal Practice—But Tools Aren’t The Real Differentiator.
Explore the mindset, cultural shifts, and training strategies that define the AI‑savvy lawyer, revealing why human judgment, standardized competence, and integrated learning—not technology alone—will shape the future of the profession.
* Facebook groups and student-created websites can work administrative magic. Seton Hall extends loan forgiveness to law grads who become prosecutors. [The Star-Ledger]
* Bad leaking karma? Federal officials arrested the U.S. intelligence analyst who provided Wikileaks with the helicopter-attack video that garnered international attention in April. An ex-hacker turned him in believing he posed a true danger to national security. [Wired]
* A lawyer on the Gaza aid flotilla that came under attack returned to Chicago yesterday, calling it an “interesting couple of days.” The UNC Law grad works for a non-profit. If she were in Biglaw, she’d probably be used to coming under fire. [Chicago Sun-Times]
* By this logic, lawyers’ brains have been rewired for years. [New York Times]
Opus 2 Steps Up Its AI Game With Acquisition Of A Legal Tech Startup
With the addition of Uncover’s technology, the litigation software is delivering rapid innovation.
* Another lawsuit against a big bank, but this time, it’s about overtime. [Reuters]