Legal technology (LegalTech) stories
Enterprises could review contracts faster and with fewer errors as the legal AI specialist says its new model beats general-purpose rivals by 5%.
Client mandates and staff retention are at risk as most professional services firms struggle to turn widespread AI use into daily practice.
Non-lawyers in procurement, sales and operations can now use the platform, as the company seeks to cut routine work in legal departments.
Law firms can now cut hidden document data from Outlook attachments without maintaining their own server infrastructure.
Law enforcement teams may cut review time as the platform tackles noisy, multilingual recordings and flags relevant evidence from $50.
Lawyers can now use approved deal files inside Harvey without leaving Datasite, as the tie-up aims to speed diligence and drafting.
The move signals Agiloft's push to tie contract AI to reliable data, with the former chief legal officer now steering product strategy.
Most firms lack formal AI policies for contract management, leaving legal and compliance teams exposed as adoption races ahead.
The rollout could speed up contract review and deal due diligence for the firm's Property and Corporate & Commercial lawyers.
The appointments bolster Google Cloud's push for AI and cloud growth in Southeast Asia, as competition intensifies across key markets.
Many Australian businesses still miss contract insights after signing, even as AI cuts agreement cycle times by 34% and saves 18 hours each.
Her arrival brings a veteran legal operator into Agiloft as customers demand stronger governance and AI oversight in contract software.
Law firms face rising risk from fabricated case references as BriefCatch rolls out a tool to check citations before filings go in.
Law firms could cut friction in transactions as verified property, company and identity data feed directly into Legora's AI workflows.
Growing concern over AI misuse of sports likenesses is boosting demand for rights-management tools as TrueRights expands into the sector.
The Surrey law firm cut desktop management overheads by moving 240 staff to cloud-based virtual desktops and centrally managed thin clients.
The package will fund chips, a supercomputer and skills training, as ministers seek to build domestic AI capacity and speed workplace adoption.
UK banks, defence contractors and telecoms groups are backing a homegrown AI model designed to run inside customers' own systems.
Rising complaint volumes and more complex cases are pushing The Ombuds Group to use AI with human oversight across all its schemes.
Firms with connected finance systems are more likely to turn AI spending into measurable gains, as poor data visibility still drains billable hours.