What Do Law Firms Need To Know About Purchasing Litigation Analytics Products?
During the Great Analytics 'Shoot-Out' at AALL, law librarians tested and compared the results of seven federal litigation analytics platforms.
During the Great Analytics 'Shoot-Out' at AALL, law librarians tested and compared the results of seven federal litigation analytics platforms.
Lex Machina's white paper provides valuable insights into legal cases and trends to help provide better legal advice, develop better litigation strategies, and win more cases.
Its new features transform how you can track and analyze the more than 200,000 bills, regulations, and other measures set to be introduced this year.
Lex Machina's white paper provides valuable insights into legal cases and trends to help provide better legal advice, develop better litigation strategies, and win more cases.
Trellis describes itself as a 'decision engine' for attorneys, enabling them to make strategic decisions about litigation matters backed by hard-and-fast data.
Litigators are usually forced to take a one-size-fits-all approach to litigation, and it shouldn’t be that way. With Context, it no longer has to be.
* Adam Feldman identifies eight issues where widely divergent state laws could lead to Supreme Court intervention. [Empirical SCOTUS] * Jonathan Adler wonders why it took so long for NBC to report on the inconsistencies and discrepancies in the allegations that Julie Swetnick made against Justice Brett Kavanaugh. [Bench Memos / National Review] * It seems that Cesar Sayoc didn't limit himself to threatening prominent liberals and progressives; he apparently went after Ilya Somin as well. [Reason / Volokh Conspiracy] * A riddle from Mark Lemley (via Orly Lobel): what's the "most Silicon Valley fact ever"? [PrawfsBlawg] * Congratulations to Bloomberg Law on the launch of its latest offering in litigation analytics. [Artificial Lawyer] * And congratulations to Fastcase on its latest deal, the acquisition of Law Street Media. [Dewey B Strategic]
Meet the team in NYC at our Monday night happy hour — 3/9 at 7pm. RSVP required.
The legal profession is entering its data-driven phase.
Government attorneys routinely handle some of the most complex and crucial legal work out there.
Litigators don’t usually have the time to find, let alone fully analyze all the data that could provide advantages in court. Luckily, litigation research options just got a major upgrade with Westlaw Edge.
Say hello to Westlaw Edge, powered by state-of-the-art artificial intelligence.
Legal teams ask a practical question. If large language models are so capable, why does legal AI still depend on curated content, and why does surfacing that content matter so much?
The best in legal research just got better. Thomson Reuters just introduced a new product, Westlaw Edge, the most intelligent legal research platform ever.
This invaluable new tool analyzes data from some 71,000 discrimination, retaliation, and harassment cases.
This is the company's most ambitious addition yet; commercial litigation transcends so many types of legal practice.
This is the first litigation analytics product to be included within a comprehensive legal research platform.
* You can't make this stuff up: San Diego Superior Court Judge Gary Kreep is accused of being a... wait for it... creep. [The Slot / Jezebel] * Details from the disciplinary panel evaluating the charges against Michigan Assistant Attorney General Christopher Armstrong. [Law Profession Blog] * When social media goes awry -- and has an impact on your legal practice. [Reboot Your Law Practice] * Why isn't your firm doing succession planning? [TMG] * An elite location for a scandal. [Law and More] * A deeper look into the latest litigation tool. [Above the Law]