Chatting with Bob Ambrogi while he was visiting Seattle last week, we agreed that the legal tech business was growing like never before.
A TOP computer expert has said there is a grave risk of artificial intelligence breaking free of human control and turning on its creators.
There is $80,000 in seed funding to be won by Ontario-based technology companies that can apply artificial intelligence (AI) to legal innovation.
Joshua Browder created a Robot Lawyer service that allows people battle parking tickets and minor offences and avoid hiring a traditional lawyer. He spoke at the conference in Vancouver on Tuesday.
The UK company Elexirr (which rebranded in July from LawBot) has thrown down the gauntlet, challenging lawyers to a competition to determine whether its bot can better predict case outcomes than can they.
Some law schools are beginning to consider what their relationships with AI could look like.
Amid the dire — and somewhat overhyped — predictions of occupations that will be decimated…
The new tool, Clerk, looks over briefs to determine whether their arguments, drafting and context are likely to find favor with judges.