AI Fuels Lawyer Boom: Jobs Surge as Tools Like Felix Level Up Legal Work
Forget the doomsday scrolls: AI's exploding, yet US lawyer jobs keep climbing. It's like rocket fuel for the legal engine, not a kill switch.
In-depth coverage of the latest Legal Tech Tools developments, trends, and analysis — curated daily.
Forget the doomsday scrolls: AI's exploding, yet US lawyer jobs keep climbing. It's like rocket fuel for the legal engine, not a kill switch.
Over $140 million raised. Forty-plus lawyers from BigLaw's elite. Norm Law isn't messing around—it's building an AI-powered juggernaut aimed straight at high-stakes private equity deals.
Forget one-off AI queries—Clio's new agents in Work and Vincent execute entire legal workflows from a single prompt. It's the agentic wave crashing hard on law firms everywhere.
ServiceNow, backbone for 85% of Fortune 500 ops, just went from Eudia customer to partner. Promises 10x gains for legal teams — but let's check the math.
Forget rote memorization — your law degree's future rests on prompting AI like a pro. Sotomayor just lit the fuse on that revolution.
Forget BigLaw dragging its feet on AI. Axiom just handed Harvey access to 14,000 lawyers on demand—and their Fortune 500 clients. This flips the script on who leads legal tech.
Cravath's decade-long prestige throne holds firm. But Vault's 2027 breakdowns expose niche dominators and regional bosses rewriting BigLaw's map.
Picture this: a partner fires off a 2 a.m. demand, and you jump. No more. AI's rewriting the legal playbook, handing back precious hours while steeling the profession against rule-of-law threats.
Imagine judges wielding AI like a lightsaber against paperwork mountains. Learned Hand is making it real, starting with America's busiest courts.
Nonequity partners are miserable. A new survey shows only 28% satisfied, a third undervalued, over half burnt out — and legal AI tools aren't helping.
Solicitor General Sauer pitches allegiance as the key. Trump bolts. Justices swarm with history bombs.
Patent pros have endured a decade of §101 headaches since Alice. Now USPTO's quirky MATTHEW AI claims to end it all—'Alright, alright, alright.' But markets aren't cheering yet.