Law firms stories
The move gives the legal AI group a base in three major regional markets as demand rises from firms handling cross-border work.
Legal teams could see AI drafts better reflect firm precedent, as the new tie-up links past matters and internal expertise to daily workflows.
Law firms are being pressed to justify AI spending as clients increasingly demand proof the technology improves service, efficiency and pricing.
The update gives law and finance firms tighter AI controls over sensitive records as they seek to deploy tools without breaching confidentiality.
Law firms risk sounding alike as AI trims routine work, pushing judgement and bespoke advice back to the centre of client value.
The tie-up aims to let law firms and in-house teams ground AI-assisted drafting and research in their own precedents and knowhow.
Legal teams will be able to benchmark AI uptake and governance as Harvey opens early access to a tool built to replace spreadsheets and manual reporting.
The hire deepens BriefCatch's push into legal AI as firms demand tools that reduce citation errors and guard against hallucinations.
Corporate legal teams are using AI to scrutinise bills more tightly, pushing law firms' invoice rejection rates from 11% to 18% in 2025.
Legal teams could gain faster drafting with verified citations as Thomson Reuters ties Anthropic's Claude into CoCounsel Legal.
The funding will help more UK SMEs cut overdue invoices, freeing cash and staff time as Adfin expands beyond collections.
Law firms facing billing and collections pressure will get executive-level guidance on cloud migration, compliance and reporting.
A growing share of trademark teams are using AI only with human oversight, as enforcement work takes up more resources and budgets rise.
Legal professionals can now access case files, notes and calendars on the move as Rock MS brings Bedrock to Apple and Android devices.
Legora snaps up Melbourne startup Graceview as it widens its legal platform with real-time tracking of rule changes across 100 jurisdictions.
Australian firms are starting to reap AI gains in productivity and customer service, but trust and pricing models are now under pressure.
Legal teams can now pull Claude Enterprise logs and chats into RelativityOne, as workplace AI use creates a new compliance burden.
The move will put AI tools in daily use for more than 1,900 staff, as HWLE seeks tighter controls around risk, training and compliance.
Students will use visual modelling software to tackle complex legal and regulatory problems as Ulster University reshapes legal training for the AI era.
Mid-market law firms can now cut onboarding delays as verified ID checks are fed straight into compliance records within Silks' platform.