Understanding AI Hallucinations: Making Sure You Don’t End Up At The Wrong Stop
We need to start with thinking of AI not as a person but a product with a foreseeable engineering risk.
We need to start with thinking of AI not as a person but a product with a foreseeable engineering risk.
From the more-of-that-famous-prosecutorial-discretion dept
LexisNexis sat down with John Ursin, Managing Partner at Schenck Price, to learn how the firm is using legal AI to strengthen client service and daily legal work.
Klapper is building what he calls a 'reasoning engine' for judges.
Perhaps it’s time to reinstitute and reemphasize the old managing by walking around concept.
AI agents already exist within legal settings, but they are a bit limited, at the moment, in what they can actually do.
The rhythm of litigation is changing.
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.
Scammers are misusing the identities of some major Biglaw firms.
Agentic capabilities will enable Clio Work to handle complex, multi-step legal tasks from a single natural-language prompt.
Hacking group throws in Epstein files crack for good measure.
The real question isn't whether firms will be targeted, but whether they are prepared.
Law firms and legal departments are writing the future of the profession in separate rooms. What happens when they actually work together?
Seeing will no longer be believing; seeing will require verification.
Lawyers trust systems that feel attentive, situationally aware, and willing to challenge them.
From the shit-rolls-downhill dept
Using its proprietary AI technology, Harvey will digitally resurrect actor Jimmy Stewart to serve as the company’s newest brand ambassador.
In literal matters of life and death, go over your damned work.