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4 Ways Judges Can Start Tackling Deepfake Authenticity Challenges
In a new paper from the University of Chicago Legal Forum, a panel of judges, legal scholars and technologists offer step-by-step guidelines for judges to tackle an influx of deepfakes into courts—along with potential pitches for Federal Evidence Rule changes.Kendra Scott, Lululemon Accused of Infringing on 'Virtual Showroom' Patent in Separate Suits
The complaints were first surfaced by Law.com Radar, ALM's source for immediate alerting on just-filed cases in state and federal courts.Legaltech Rundown: SimplyConvert Launches CaseHQ, Kira Spinoff Zuva Announces Contract Tool and More
An update on the legal tech market's past week, from product launches to new partnerships.What OpenAI's New High-Level Reasoning Model Means for Legal Tech
While the new model—OpenAI o1—could expand the number of legal use cases generative AI can tackle, certain barriers may make it less ubiquitous in legal tech.Filevine Launches Gen AI Transcription Assistant for Real Time Deposition Analysis
Filevine's Depo CoPilot can roll out transcriptions within minutes and analyze testimony as it's happening.View more book results for the query "*"
Lawyers Remain Responsible for Misuse of AI Tools, Says Singapore Legal Tech Panel
Lawyers' duties and responsibilities won't change with AI, as the ultimate responsibility of what is presented to clients or in court lies with them, experts say.Legal Leaders See AI's Multitude of Uses as Both Blessing and Curse
"The best way to understand the practical benefit of AI is to use it for your specific work," said Ryan Groff, a lecturer at New England Law | Boston.Deadline Extended: Legalweek Leaders in Tech Law Awards 2025
We're excited to announce the call for nominations for the 2025 Legalweek Leaders in Tech Law Awards. We've added a few new categories this year,…The Techification of the Law Firm C-Suite
While many lawyers were busy focusing on how generative AI would impact the practice of law, its shockwaves were reaching all the way to the venerable Big Law C-suite.New York Times, Athletic Media Hit With Data Privacy Class Action for Allegedly Sharing User Data
The claim alleged that the New York Times violated the federal Video Privacy Protection Act of 1988 and the New York Video Consumer Protection Act by sharing consumers' personally identifiable information with third parties. Counsel has not yet appeared for the defendants.Trending Stories
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