By Victoria Hudgins | October 29, 2019
A new ABA report found that accuracy was lawyers' top concern with AI. But legal tech observers and lawyers say it's understanding how the software works that leaves lawyers on the fence and some software on the shelf.
By Karen Sloan | October 29, 2019
Florida's overall pass rate for first-time test takers bumped up seven percentage points for one of the largest gains nationally.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Simmons | Gina Passarella Cipriani | October 29, 2019
"When the money got tight, those people who had huge practices and portable business left. But had there been stronger leadership, that might not have happened," says New York lawyer Les Corwin, a partner at Eisner whose practice includes law firm bankruptcies and dissolutions.
By Tom McParland | October 28, 2019
A 17-second video of the ordeal was later widely viewed on the internet, "creating Ferguson-like tensions between the community and the police," the complaint said.
By Frank Ready | October 28, 2019
Thomson Reuters' 2019 Law Firm Leaders found that while firms may want to leverage tech to cut costs, they still have a lot of work ahead of them when it comes to actually implementing the right solutions.
By Christine Simmons | Xiumei Dong | October 28, 2019
"It's not the hardware you worry about. It's the mistake that someone makes that inadvertently gives a bad actor access," said one law firm cybersecurity partner.
By Sue Reisinger | October 25, 2019
A new study shows more publicly held companies are adopting stronger measures to disclose their spending on political campaigns.
By Todd Albright | October 25, 2019
There are some simple ways to track your due diligence activities to keep your deals positively moving forward. To stay ahead, don't make these five mistakes.
By Mark Harris | October 25, 2019
Not too long from now, all of the active contracts in a company's corpus will be digitized and translated into structured data. Instead of being disguised in impenetrable legalese, locked into scanned PDFs and then, often, misplaced entirely, contracts will become a source of incredibly valuable data for the enterprises that enter into them.
By Dan M. Clark | October 25, 2019
The Trump administration rebuked the state's claims about common-law privilege in their motion to throw out the lawsuit, saying that federal law promulgated by Congress superseded the centuries-old understanding.
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