Paxton is an innovative legal technology firm transforming the legal landscape. Our vision is to equip legal professionals with an AI assistant that supercharges efficiency, enhances quality, and enables extraordinary results.
Developer of an document review platform designed to help law firms automate the reviewing process and find relevant evidence. The company's platform uses artificial intelligence to find evidence to support clients' cases, instantly view events timelines, autogenerate tags, and auto-categorize documents, helping lawyers to unearth critical evidence, and auto-generate comprehensive timelines.
DocLens.ai is a Software as a Service (SaaS) platform that leverages artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to assist insurance professionals in managing legal risks associated with liability claims and complex document reviews. The platform is designed to process both structured and unstructured data, including various types of documents, to extract critical information and provide actionable insights.
Wexler establishes the facts in any contentious matter, from an internal investigation, to international litigation to an employee grievance. Disputes of any kind rely on a deep understanding of the facts. With Wexler, legal, HR, compliance , forensic accounting and tax teams can quickly understand the facts in any matter, reducing doubt, saving critical time and increasing ROI, through more successful outcomes and fewer written off costs.
DeepJudge is the core AI platform for legal professionals. Powered by world-class enterprise search that serves up immediate access to all of the institutional knowledge in your firm, DeepJudge enables you to build entire AI applications, encapsulate multi-step workflows, and implement LLM agents.
Alexi is the premier AI-powered litigation platform, providing legal teams with high-quality research memos, pinpointing crucial legal issues and arguments, and automating routine litigation tasks.
In particular, the use of generative AI software tools has gained popularity among many companies and has quickly become a ground-breaking technology capable of creating realistic and innovative content such as images, music and even text. The focus is often on chat GPT, but generative AI is not limited to text creation. Generative AI tools can also be used to optimise and efficiently support internal company processes and developments for recruitment, product development or sales.
The article examines the significant milestones and innovations that have shaped the legal landscape, highlighting how technology has revolutionised the way legal professionals operate, enhance efficiency, and deliver services. From the early adoption of electronic disclosure tools to the latest advancements in artificial intelligence and machine learning, this piece provides insights into the dynamic interplay between technology and the legal profession.
AI is increasingly valuable in numerous space domains, from manufacturing and in-orbit operations to sensing and data analytics. The reliance on AI is only likely to grow, making AI an integral part of the space sector. Accordingly, the new Act will affect many players across the industry.
In today’s fast-paced business environment, contract review has undergone a significant transformation. The advent of artificial intelligence (AI) has enabled companies to streamline contract management, making the process more efficient and less prone to human error. However, despite these advancements, challenges remain, particularly concerning the complexity, importance, and value of different contracts.
States are advancing AI laws in 6 key areas: (1) consumer protection (e.g., Virginia HB 2094), (2) sector-specific regulation in health, finance, and employment, (3) chatbot transparency, (4) generative AI labeling (e.g., watermarks, notices), (5) energy usage reporting by AI data centers, and (6) frontier model safety (e.g., audits, liability). These laws aim to curb risks and promote ethical AI deployment.
UK’s Ofcom warns online service providers that generative AI tools may fall under the Online Safety Act (OSA). Chatbots enabling user sharing are “user-to-user services”; AI-enhanced search tools are “search services.” Porn-generating tools may require age checks. Compliance deadlines in 2025 include risk and access assessments. Ofcom stresses safeguarding, especially for services accessible by children.