Huski.ai is a company that leverages AI to assist IP lawyers and brand professionals with trademark clearance, watching, and enforcement. It aims to streamline brand protection and growth using cutting-edge AI technology.
PatSnap, a company specializing in innovation intelligence and patent analytics. PatSnap, founded in 2007 and headquartered in Beijing, offers an AI-powered platform that assists various industries in the ideation to commercialization process. The platform analyzes patents, R&D insights, and competitive landscapes. PatSnap's technology helps innovation professionals uncover emerging trends, identify risks, and find opportunities.
IPRally is a company specializing in AI-driven patent search and analysis tools. It offers a web application that uses knowledge graphs and supervised deep learning AI to provide semantic and technical understanding of patent literature. The company aims to increase the productivity of inventors and patent professionals by offering a search tool that functions like a patent expert.
EvenUp is a venture-backed generative AI startup that focuses on ensuring injury victims receive the full value of their claims. It achieves this by using AI to analyze medical documents and case files, turning them into comprehensive demand packages for injury lawyers. EvenUp aims to provide equal access to justice in personal injury cases, regardless of a person's background, income, or access to quality representation.
Harvey is a suite of AI tools designed for legal professionals, offering solutions for drafting, research, and document analysis. Developed by experts in artificial intelligence, Harvey utilizes advanced natural language processing to assist legal experts in their work.
Canarie is developing a compliance platform that uses AI and ML to automate the creation, review, and revision of disclosures and policies for financial institutions.
The new GenAI Profile reflects NIST's recommendations for implementing the risk management principles of the AI RMF specifically with respect to generative AI. This guidance is intended to assist organizations with implementing comprehensive risk management techniques for specific known risks that are unique to or exacerbated by the deployment and use of generative AI applications and systems.
Image-generating technology is accelerating quickly, making it much more likely that you will be seeing "digital replicas" (sometimes referred to as "deepfakes") of celebrities and non-celebrities alike across film, television, documentaries, marketing, advertising, and election materials. Meanwhile, legislators are advocating for protections against the exploitation of name, image, and likeness while attempting to balance the First Amendment rights creatives enjoy.
Aescape offers AI-powered robotic massages via its “Aertable,” which uses real-time feedback and a body scan system to deliver personalized experiences. With features like “Aerpoints” simulating therapist touch and “Aerwear” enhancing accuracy, Aescape addresses the massage industry’s challenges like inconsistency and therapist shortages. While expanding rapidly, it raises legal issues including liability, privacy, licensing, regulation, and IP concerns.
Large language models rely on vast internet-scraped data, raising legal concerns, especially around intellectual property. Many U.S. lawsuits allege IP violations tied to data scraping. An OECD report, Intellectual Property Issues in AI Trained on Scraped Data, examines these challenges and offers guidance for policymakers on addressing legal and policy concerns in AI training.
The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) tools in healthcare is revolutionizing the industry, bringing efficiencies to the practice of medicine and benefits to patients. However, the negotiation of third-party AI tools requires a nuanced understanding of the tool’s application, implementation, risk and the contractual pressure points.
Parents of two Texas children have sued Character Technologies, claiming its chatbot, Character.AI, exposed their kids (ages 17 and 11) to self-harm, violence, and sexual content. Filed by the Social Media Victims Law Center and Tech Justice Law Project, the suit seeks to shut down the platform until safety issues are addressed. It also names the company’s founders, Google, and Alphabet Inc. as defendants.