Experts: Eschewing AI may create legal malpractice risk
Legal experts say lawyers could someday face malpractice claims for failing to use AI tools as legal ethics and standards evolve.
U.S. Supreme Court declines to review AI-generated art copyright case
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a case on whether AI-generated art can be copyrighted, upholding the requirement for human authorship under U.S. law.
Stinson integrates Harvey AI into its operations firmwide
Stinson has adopted Harvey, a generative AI platform, to improve legal efficiency, research, client collaboration, and strategic legal analysis.
Google, chatbot startup move to settle suicide suits
Google and Character.AI agreed to settle wrongful-death lawsuits alleging AI chatbots harmed children, raising unresolved questions about AI liability.
Mitchell Hamline professor pushes AI use in law school
Mitchell Hamline law professor Gregory Duhl is integrating artificial intelligence into legal education, reshaping how law students learn research, writing, and analysis.
Survey: In-house lawyers see little AI savings
A new ACC survey finds most in-house lawyers see no cost savings yet from law firms using generative AI, though usage by corporate legal teams has doubled.
AI copyright lawsuits reshape legal landscape
Generative AI lawsuits test copyright law, as courts weigh fair use, infringement, and authorship in cases reshaping the future of creative rights.
AI is here to stay: Law profs highlight benefits, risks for attorneys
As AI adoption in law surges, experts discuss how lawyers use generative tools for writing, client communication, and ethical practice management.
Should using AI mean lower attorney fees?
Virginia Bar's ethics opinion supports fair billing when lawyers use AI, stating expertise in using legal tech has value and deserves compensation.
AI reshaping construction law and project planning
AI tools are changing construction workflows and legal risks. Lawyers must adapt to evolving tech in contracts, discovery, and project documentation.
Judge allows newspaper copyright lawsuit against OpenAI to proceed
A federal judge has ruled that The New York Times and other newspapers can proceed with a copyright lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft.
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