Legal AI: Is Anyone Actually Using It?
The hype around legal AI is deafening, but a new survey throws cold water on the party, revealing that most in-house legal departments are barely scratching the surface of what's possible.
The hype around legal AI is deafening, but a new survey throws cold water on the party, revealing that most in-house legal departments are barely scratching the surface of what's possible.
The Legal Innovators Paris event is gearing up, and with sponsor announcements rolling out, the stage is set for key discussions in legal tech. What does this mean for the practitioners grappling with AI's relentless march?
The sprawling, unpredictable world of litigation is finally getting a tech overhaul. Forget contracts: the real battleground for legal AI is now in the dispute resolution space, with market projections hitting $10 billion by 2028.
Legal tech's relentless march toward consolidation continues. Eudia’s latest move bundles specialized AI agents with its novel 'Expert Digital Twins' capability.
Law firm economics, built on billable hours, are fundamentally at odds with productivity-boosting AI. This creates a massive opening for in-house legal departments to lead the next era of legal tech adoption.
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.