You speak to a lot of lawyers and
legal tech people, do you feel that the current surge in interest in legal tech is sustainable and a change in the status quo, or is this just a blip that won't last?
We have the supposedly leading
legal tech people in the country (thousands of them) assembled in New York and not one of them acting acting like technologists attending tech conferences in other industries.
Not exact matches
This is not to say that the
tech industry is fundamentally incapable of understanding the wants and needs of both lawyers and
people in need of
legal services.
Like many
people in the
legal tech world he has now become a «recovering lawyer».
We compete with other firms who provide top - tier
legal counsel to scaling
tech companies; not with the unrealistic price expectations of
people who, through inexperience or delusion, want Teslas at Kia prices.
Closer to home, at least where I am in Legalese, we list down in our website the
legal tech startups and
people that we've encountered.
Artificial Lawyer asked Larry Bridgesmith, who is taking part in the Nashville node, and who is also the Founder and CEO of
legal tech company, Dash, which is «the world's first interoperable, AI - powered platform for aligning
people, projects, and processes for optimum results».
Connect with Lawyers, Software Developers, Designers, Digital Innovators and many other
people interested in
Legal Tech.
Show Notes: 00:00 Intro 00:21 VisaBot and Chatbot 00:41 We are on Facebook Messenger and Slack 01:04 We have helped 70,000
people get Visas to this country in just 6 months 01:50 How did you come up with this and get into the
legal tech space?
Connect with e-discovery experts and learn about the latest
legal and
tech updates online in the Relativity Community site and in
person at Relativity Fest, September 30 — October 3 in Chicago.
Ideally, an incubator would partner with
tech - startup incubators, business schools, co-working spaces, low - income non-profits, and other organizations where lots of
people who need
legal help at a discount tend to gather.
Among them were Bebe Chueh, cofounding partner of the innovative technology - based law firm Atrium LLP; Chrissie Lightfoot, cofounder and CEO of Robot Lawyer LISA; Dorna Moini, the lawyer who founded HelpSelf
Legal to help low - income people handle common legal problems; Emily Montgomery, the Las Vegas attorney who launched the legal keyboard product Citepad; Melinda Sungenis Black, the veteran legal tech executive who is preparing to launch The Expert Witness Exchange; and Amy Wan, the lawyer who started Bootstrap Legal to help real estate investors get legal paperwork done more ea
Legal to help low - income
people handle common
legal problems; Emily Montgomery, the Las Vegas attorney who launched the legal keyboard product Citepad; Melinda Sungenis Black, the veteran legal tech executive who is preparing to launch The Expert Witness Exchange; and Amy Wan, the lawyer who started Bootstrap Legal to help real estate investors get legal paperwork done more ea
legal problems; Emily Montgomery, the Las Vegas attorney who launched the
legal keyboard product Citepad; Melinda Sungenis Black, the veteran legal tech executive who is preparing to launch The Expert Witness Exchange; and Amy Wan, the lawyer who started Bootstrap Legal to help real estate investors get legal paperwork done more ea
legal keyboard product Citepad; Melinda Sungenis Black, the veteran
legal tech executive who is preparing to launch The Expert Witness Exchange; and Amy Wan, the lawyer who started Bootstrap Legal to help real estate investors get legal paperwork done more ea
legal tech executive who is preparing to launch The Expert Witness Exchange; and Amy Wan, the lawyer who started Bootstrap
Legal to help real estate investors get legal paperwork done more ea
Legal to help real estate investors get
legal paperwork done more ea
legal paperwork done more easily.
Aaron Street: If your future orientation or business creativity or
tech savviness have made you feel a little bit alone in your law practice or in your
legal community or if you've actually seen roadblocks put in front of you by old - school
people who don't get it, let us know.
«It was very much the core
legal /
tech community at the beginning and now we see CIOs and partners of law firms,
people from government coming.»
This involves different formats: weekly group meetings open to Stanford
people and visitors — broadcast through the web allowing remote participants from different countries,
legal tech startups and researchers who come in and do their pitch.
So for instance, I might say Christopher Anderson, he is a
legal tech, might be a tag, or I might tag him as coach or consultant or something like that, or I might take a lawyer and tag them with their practice areas, because what can I do with that then I can filter based on practice areas or type of
person.
This will help you better accommodate the needs of everyone, including younger
tech - savvy clients, and busy
people who would rather not meet with you face to face to handle their
legal needs.
Aaron Street: Yeah, I mean, we've spent much of the last couple of years, especially since we launched this show, trying to figure out who our
people are in the
legal industry and the
legal industry is notorious for being slower and more traditional and more conservative and less
tech - savvy than the rest of the universe.
The official name is limited licensed
legal technician, and a lot of
people have referred to them as triple LTs, but most of those in practice are calling themselves
legal technicians or even law
tech is another one I've heard.
When considering where
legal tech may head in the future, we could see the introduction of technology to practice areas like immigration, where regulations could be placed into an application that would be more accessible to
people.
LawFest 2017 was a great opportunity to network — meeting both like - minded
people in other organisations — and getting validation for your crazy ideas at work — or meeting
people who challenged your ideas of
Legal Tech.
As business,
tech and the law collide, the
tech sector needs
people with a
legal background who can interpret the law for new products.
Something like 1,500
people, hundreds of
legal tech exhibitors, and dozens of presenters attended in 2017.
A Dutch
legal tech group, LegalThings One, has launched a blockchain - based contract system called «Legal Fling» that is designed to allow people to record their agreement to consensual behaviour in the bedroom, but without having to produce a pen and paper in the middle of a romantic mo
legal tech group, LegalThings One, has launched a blockchain - based contract system called «
Legal Fling» that is designed to allow people to record their agreement to consensual behaviour in the bedroom, but without having to produce a pen and paper in the middle of a romantic mo
Legal Fling» that is designed to allow
people to record their agreement to consensual behaviour in the bedroom, but without having to produce a pen and paper in the middle of a romantic moment.
Irene Mo, ABA Center for Innovation —
People and Processes, THEN Products: A
Legal Tech Mantra in Practice Technology is not a silver bullet to problems in the legal indu
Legal Tech Mantra in Practice Technology is not a silver bullet to problems in the
legal indu
legal industry.
Karen Winton, Managing Parner Nest VC: «
Legal Geek's Law Tech Hackathon for Good with the Hackney Community Law Centre uncovered some unique and creative ideas that have the potential to transform the practise of law within the legal aid environment and greatly improve people's lives.&r
Legal Geek's Law
Tech Hackathon for Good with the Hackney Community Law Centre uncovered some unique and creative ideas that have the potential to transform the practise of law within the
legal aid environment and greatly improve people's lives.&r
legal aid environment and greatly improve
people's lives.»
This weekend the UK's largest Law
Tech community,
Legal Geek partnered with Hackney Community Law Centre, a charity which provides free and independent legal advice and representation to people living, working or studying in the London borough of Hackney, to host Europe's first ever Charity LawTech Charity Hacka
Legal Geek partnered with Hackney Community Law Centre, a charity which provides free and independent
legal advice and representation to people living, working or studying in the London borough of Hackney, to host Europe's first ever Charity LawTech Charity Hacka
legal advice and representation to
people living, working or studying in the London borough of Hackney, to host Europe's first ever Charity LawTech Charity Hackathon.
So much has happened, so much
legal tech innovation has taken place, so many inspiring
people have come forward as AI pioneers.
Pretty low -
tech, low - cost
legal marketing that gets you in front of
people who can send you business.
Since 2014, Dutch
Legal Tech has been a leading community platform where
people and organisations with a stake in
Legal Innovation meet.
Bob, who is the chief IT officer of Baker Hostetler and one of the most astute observers of the
legal tech scene, had the idea to create a consortium of corporate counsel,
tech people and outside counsel to talk about blockchain, what it can do and where it can go.
Legal IT consultant Neil Cameron says this could be because law firms are often slow to adapt to new
tech trends, leading to a gap between what
people use personally at home and what they use at work.
Sure the sponsorship presents the opportunity to build the LexisNexis brand in the local Raleigh community — most
people in our back yard don't realize how much our local offices have grown or the opportunities (arguably, the largest concentration of
legal tech professionals in the US are in Raleigh).
Follow @NCCyberAdvocate on Periscope to see live coverage of events and interviews with some of my favorite
people in
legal tech.
And then, so you see my blog there and then in the ABA Survey when they talk about what
people learn from things, like, one of the big sources of the ABA Journal were I've written a
tech column for years, and so, I unfairly like to add those numbers together and look at what a large percentage of
people are learning about
legal technology for me, and then Tom, of course corrects my analysis of those numbers.
The State of
Legal Tech 2017 was originally published in FoundationLab Digest on Medium, where
people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
People who were in a law firm but left, wanted to start their own company and I am seeing that even through your own Women of
Legal Tech Series with LTN, how more women are seeing a path forward.
A Dutch
legal tech group, LegalThings One, has launched a blockchain - based contract system called «Legal Fling» that is designed to allow people to record the
legal tech group, LegalThings One, has launched a blockchain - based contract system called «
Legal Fling» that is designed to allow people to record the
Legal Fling» that is designed to allow
people to record their...
Whereas 12 - 18 months ago, they noted,
people were talking about
legal tech, it was only now (recently in the last 6 - 12 months) that they're starting to really see it and experience it — and they're most definitely paying attention to what it means.
I've talked with dozens of
people from
legal tech companies over the past few months and they all admit to a fundamental truth: The success or failure of their products hinges on whether their customers make the necessary process changes to improve their practices.
On offer was an interrupted weekend but with pizza & beer, a chance to test new ideas, to meet like - minded
people, to speak to mentors and to develop some
tech that could be useful in the
legal sector.
People in
legal tech think there has to be a catch or that maybe it's a gimmick.
Below are 5
people who are making waves in the
legal tech industry in 2014.
I last attended the conference fifteen years ago, I was starting a
legal tech non-profit to help individuals and small business
people.
Through a series of informal catch - ups the group quickly grew from month to month and gained momentum thanks to the energy of Jodie Baker, founder of in - house counsel software Xakia, who was very instrumental in bringing together like - minded
people that were passionate about building game - changing
legal tech.
We are a small team of passionate,
tech - savvy British social entrepreneurs, looking to democratise access to
legal help and advice for
people and businesses, in the wake of the
legal aid cuts and resulting advice deserts.
We quickly realized that there were more
people just like ourselves yearning to be a part of an engaged and informed
legal tech community and so ALTA was born.
While
Legal Tech has been more commonly associated with the application of technology and software to help law firms with practice management, document storage, billing, accounting, and electronic discovery, in the last few years it has blossomed more into a means whereby access can be granted to
people through online software that might reduce or even eliminate the need to consult a lawyer.
Either the conference organizers didn't do due diligence in finding diverse panels to speak at their conference OR there simply aren't diverse
people making
legal tech.
Casey Flaherty, founder of
Legal Tech Audit Casey Flaherty, founder of
Legal Tech Audit Although it's now in its early stages, the system could have the potential to grow into a cottage industry the way that Kaplan and Princeton Review grew out of
people willing to pay for SAT prep.