AI in IP: The 2026 ROI Reckoning Hits Hard
The faith-based AI adoption rush of 2025 crashes into 2026's ROI demands. IP pros without metrics? Budget axes loom.
The faith-based AI adoption rush of 2025 crashes into 2026's ROI demands. IP pros without metrics? Budget axes loom.
Burned by coaching? Thousands of lawyers drop big bucks yearly, only to spin wheels. One vet's harsh truth: you might not be coachable. AI's lurking as the smarter bet.
Picture this: a lawyer types 'build a defense strategy' and watches AI orchestrate the entire playbook. Clio's latest push into agentic AI isn't hype—it's the next layer of autonomy hitting legal workflows.
Everyone's screaming for more leads. Wrong. A quick audit shows firms are hemorrhaging paid-for cases right out the gate.
Law school rankings just turned upside down — wildly. From Biglaw's Trump defiance to a judge booted for lying, today's docket exposes the cracks in legal land.
TechCrunch Disrupt is running a five-day flash sale on 2026 tickets—but the real story isn't the discount. It's what the conference reveals about how tech deals actually get made.
Common Paper just weaponized contract negotiation with a 10X faster AI engine and a partnership that signals where legal tech is actually headed. The question isn't whether it works—it's whether this alliance model becomes the industry standard.
Antti Innanen built a law firm with 66 AI agents running on his Mac Mini. It works while he sleeps. Now he's decided to give it away—and his reasons reveal something architects aren't talking about yet.
Harvey just published results showing legal agents can teach themselves complex legal work—jumping from 41% to 88% accuracy through something called 'harness engineering.' This isn't chatbot stuff. This is real automation.
Harvey just dropped details on Spectre, its autonomous agent sniffing out bugs and Slack gripes without a human nudge. It's pitching a 'law firm world model' – sounds futuristic, but smells like the same old use game for Big Law partners.
Future of Life Institute just unleashed an $8 million blitz for AI regulation. Targeting red-state voters tired of Silicon Valley overlords—or so they claim.
Westminster's latest social media ban push for kids isn't protection—it's a power grab. Ministers get carte blanche to decide what's 'harmful,' and we're all collateral damage.