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For In-House Lawyers Trying to Keep Up on AI Regulation, States Are Ground Zero
State laws are proliferating that cover such topics as the creation of deep fakes and the use of AI in the employee-recruitment process.Klarna Lawyers Told to Use ChatGPT to Save Time Drafting Contracts
The fintech company's CEO has told staff to "test, test, test and explore", with 86% of the legal function now making use of generative-AI models in their day-to-day work.Everlaw Offers Free Gen AI Access Through 'Everlaw for Good' Program
The program provides unlimited access for eligible 501(c)(3) organizations to the Everlaw platform, including, now, its generative AI beta program Everlaw AI Assistant, free of charge up to "a monthly cap" with discounted rates for larger matters.SurePoint Technologies Acquires Business Intelligence Provider Leopard Solutions
The acquisition of Leopard Solutions, founded by Laura Leopard, comes a little over two years after Surepoint bought Cole Valley Software, developer of law firm client relationship management (CRM) software company ContactEase.The Debate on Data Scraping Was Almost Over—Until Generative AI Rekindled It
Courts have issued several rulings over the last decades on data scraping—and, in most cases, have authorized the practice. But generative AI has allowed scraping to proliferate to levels that experts say are now "unsustainable."View more book results for the query "*"
Are You Doing 'Deep Fake' Marketing? Consider Using a Scorecard
How can in-house counsel swiftly and competently assess legal risk for newly minted AI-driven campaigns? The answer lies in striking a balance of acceptable levels of legal risk, as defined within your organization, that conform with applicable industry standards, and guided by broader ethical considerations specific to your use case. With this in mind, we have provided a scorecard to weigh the likelihood and severity associated with any deep fake marketing campaign.NJSBA Annual Convention Addresses AI: 'Are There Legitimate Concerns? Absolutely'
"This is a risk-averse, change-averse profession that is entirely based on past precedent," AI panelist and ALM chief legal strategist Patrick Fuller said. "Change does not necessarily happen quickly in this profession, but I do think that the fear cycle right now is really high. It is good to be on guard, and it is good to be pragmatic about it and to plan for it, but I caution against getting too afraid of too much change happening quickly."The Marble Palace Blog: AI Meets 'Brown v. Board'
Friday marks the 70th anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision "Brown v. Board of Education." To celebrate the day, AI groups have gathered to bring new life to learning about the case.Swedish Gen AI Assistant Leya Raises $10.5M in Seed Funding
Leya offers a generative AI assistant that looks to streamline legal tasks such as document analysis, due diligence review, data extraction, legal research and drafting legal documents. The company will use the funding to grow its international expansion.'Another Arrow in the Quiver': Quinn Brings AI-Backed Litigation Forecasting Tools to All US Lawyers
The firm's partner, Pre/Dicta, has claimed 85% accuracy in predicting motion to dismiss decisions in federal court. In the past year, it has added forecasting tools for class certification, venue transfer, summary judgment and motions to compel, as well as case timelines.Trending Stories
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