Ontra is the global leader in AI legal tech for private markets. Powered by industry-leading AI, data from 1M+ contracts, and a global network of legal professionals, Ontra's private markets technology platform streamlines and optimizes critical legal and compliance workflows across the full fund lifecycle. Ontra’s purpose-built solutions automate contracts, streamline obligation management, digitize entity management, and surface insights.
SpeedLegal is an AI contract negotiator that helps startups save $1k/contract ~$140k+/year when reviewing contracts using AI. Business people using SpeedLegal easily spot contract risks, negotiate better terms, save 75% of their time & boost deal closures 3X.
Definely is a leading provider of LegalTech solutions for drafting, reviewing, and understanding legal documents.
Luminance is the pioneer in Legal-Grade™ AI, wherever computer meets contract. Using a Mixture of Experts approach - known as the “Panel of Judges” - Luminance brings specialist AI to every touchpoint a business has with its contracts, from generation to negotiation and post-execution analysis. Developed by AI experts from the University of Cambridge, Luminance's technology is trusted by 700+ customers in 70+ countries, from AMD and the LG Group to Hitachi, BBC Studios and Staples.
Spellbook is an AI-powered contract drafting and review tool designed for legal professionals. Integrated directly into Microsoft Word, it leverages advanced language models, such as OpenAI's GPT-4, to assist lawyers in drafting, reviewing, and managing contracts more efficiently. Key features include generating new clauses based on context, detecting aggressive terms, and suggesting missing clauses to enhance contract quality.
Built on App Orchid's state of the art AI platform, ContractAI is an AI-powered SaaS-based Advanced CLM solution that automates and streamlines the analysis, creation and negotiation of contracts. ContractAI utilizes AI to automatically ingest and analyze historical contracts to author templates based on terms that were proven win-win. ContractAI eliminates the painful redlining process by giving suppliers vetted clause options.
As AI technology advances, so do the legal questions. This breakdown looks at the ripple effects on IP rights, privacy laws, and liability standards—plus the frameworks taking shape. Click to see how these changes could impact your rights and responsibilities.
Generative AI is shaking up intellectual property law. This analysis dives into ownership conflicts, shifting enforcement patterns, and what we might see in 2025 litigation and policy changes. Click to uncover how AI is rewriting the rules of creativity and protection.
In this guidebook, we provide an overview of the current positions of the national data protection authorities in the EU member states, Norway, Switzerland the United Kingdom with respect to how personal data may be processed in the context of AI systems.
Explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping law and legal systems in this four-week course. From criminal justice to healthcare, IP, and labor law, you'll gain a foundational understanding of how AI impacts public and private sectors. Learn to responsibly engage with AI, grasp key legal implications, and anticipate real-world challenges. Perfect for curious minds—no legal background required. Dive into the future of law, one module at a time.
Discover how trade secrets and AI are revolutionizing innovation in the digital age. This report delves into the intersection of big data, artificial intelligence, and the protection of proprietary information, offering valuable insights for businesses navigating the complexities of modern technology landscapes. Gain a deeper understanding of the strategies companies employ to safeguard their competitive edge in an era where data is king.
According to some futurists, financial markets’ automation will substitute increasingly sophisticated, objective, analytical, model-based assessments of, for example, a borrower’s creditworthiness for direct human evaluations irrevocably tainted by bias and subject to the cognitive limits of the human brain. However, even if they do occur, such advances may violate other legal principles.