Mentioned in 12 AI use cases across 2 industries
This is about using AI as a super-fast paralegal that can read millions of emails and documents, find what matters for a case, and summarize it for lawyers, instead of humans doing that work manually.
This is like giving eDiscovery and litigation support teams a super-smart research assistant that can read huge piles of documents, understand what they say, and answer questions about them in plain English—without replacing the lawyers’ judgment.
This is about using AI as a smart junior assistant for lawyers — helping read huge piles of documents, draft routine language, and surface relevant cases so the attorney can focus on judgment and strategy.
This is like giving litigators a super-fast junior attorney who can skim millions of pages, highlight what matters for your case, and organize it for you in hours instead of weeks.
This is like giving every litigation team a super-fast junior attorney that can read thousands of documents, flag what’s relevant, explain why it thinks so, and show its work—so humans can make final calls much faster and with better evidence at hand.
This is about using AI as a smart legal assistant for law firms—helping read and draft documents, search case law faster, and automate routine legal tasks so lawyers can focus on strategy and clients.
Think of this as using a very fast, very smart legal intern that can read huge amounts of text, find relevant information, and draft first versions of documents—but still needs a real lawyer to check, interpret, and sign off.
Imagine a smart digital paralegal that helps a county’s welfare fraud unit sift through benefits applications, complaints, and case files to spot likely fraud, organize evidence, and prepare case summaries for attorneys and investigators.
Imagine having a tireless junior lawyer who can instantly read millions of emails, contracts, source code files and technical documents, then answer, “Show me everything related to this patent dispute and highlight the risky items,” in plain English. That’s what GenAI-powered e-discovery does for IP-heavy cases.
This is like giving your litigation and investigations team a super‑powered, tireless junior lawyer that can read millions of emails and documents in hours, highlight what’s important, group similar issues, and surface risks and evidence so your senior lawyers only spend time on what really matters.
This is about using tools like ChatGPT—tailored for lawyers—to draft documents, summarize long cases, search through legal information, and automate repetitive office work so law firms can focus more on clients and strategy.
Think of this as a checklist to see whether your eDiscovery software is a true legal “co-pilot” or just a smarter search bar. A truly intelligent platform doesn’t just find keywords; it understands documents, people, and issues, and helps you prioritize what matters most in a case.