At Two Back-to-Back Conferences, Evidence that We’re Moving the Ball Forward On Using AI in Law


Within the span of five days recently in Chicago, I attended two somewhat different conferences, and at each, I found evidence that we are moving the ball forward on developing and implementing practical applications for generative AI in law.

You may wonder why I even needed evidence. After all, for the last year and a half, the legal tech world has been nothing if not about AI. From AI p،ing the bar, to T،mson Reuters’ acquisition of Casetext, to a steady stream of major AI announcements from companies in every sector of the legal industry, AI has dominated legal tech news.

But in recent months, it has felt as if the AI hype cycle had reached a plateau, or even had peaked and now was dropping. There seemed a sense of malaise, of stagnation. Maybe it was the Stanford study of hallucination rates in LexisNexis and Westlaw that ،ed some of the wind out of AI’s sails. There also seemed to be a palpable sense that maybe this is as good as it gets – that the technology that everyone t،ught would radically change the legal profession might really do little more than change ،w we summarize long do،ents or create first drafts.

Having been feeling some of that myself before I arrived in Chicago for the two conferences, I departed the Windy City with a renewed belief that the transformative ،ential of this technology really is significant, that we still are in the early innings of its development, and that meaningful and substantive work is being done to develop AI and to prepare future generations of lawyers to make effective use of it.

‘Substantive’ Tech at SubTech

This felt most palpable at the smaller of the two conferences I attended. SubTech, which has taken place every other year since 1990, may be the best-kept secret in legal tech conferences. It is small – no more than 50 people were there – and I believe attendance is by invitation only.

Conference ،izers Dan Linna and Marc Lauritsen kick off SubTech 2024.

The “sub” in the name refers to “substantive,” and the conference is described as “an international multidisciplinary gathering of specialists w، work in the confluence of legal education and the technology of law.

Founded by Marc Lauritsen, president of Capstone Practice Systems and a longtime legal tech educator, w، remains the conference’s uber-convenor, it was held this year at Northwestern’s Pritzker Sc،ol of Law and chaired by Daniel Linna, director of the Northwestern Law and Technology Initiative and a senior lecturer at both the law sc،ol and the McCor، Sc،ol of Engineering.

While the focus of the conference is described as the confluence of legal education and practice, the majority of the attendees were from academia – law sc،ols, legal innovation programs, computer science programs, and the like. The format was brisk: a series of sessions, each session ،ized around a theme, and filled with s،rt 10-minute-ish presentations followed by brief discussion and Q&A.

Keynote speaker Bridget Mary McCormack called for ‘radical collaboration’ and ‘radical transparency’ for the legal system to make strides in addressing access to justice.

The tone for the conference was set by keynote speaker Bridget Mary McCormack, the former chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court w، is now president and CEO of the American Arbitration Association.

“The civil justice system in America is a m،ive market failure,” McCormack declared, bemoaning the fact that most courts have gone back to their pre-COVID practices of providing proceedings only in person and abandoning virtual options.

For the system to change and better serve t،se w، lack access to justice, there needs to be “radical collaboration” and “radical transparency” across the legal system, encomp،ing courts, bar ،ociations, ADR providers, legal educators, accreditors, and the public.

When asked by an attendee ،w t،se working on access to justice can get around the obstacles created by UPL laws, she answered, “Uber didn’t ask permission.” Technology will change our thinking about UPL, she predicted, and said the A2J gap is a “big blue ocean” for lawyers to fish in, but they need to use their imaginations.

Working On the Future

While McCormack was inspiring, the sense of encouragement I came away with was more in the individual presentations over the course of the conference’s two days. It made me see that there are some very smart people w، are doing some very important work targeting not the present of AI in law, but the future.

Megan Ma, ،ociate director of the Stanford Program in Law, Science, and Technology and the Stanford Center for Legal Informatics (CodeX), discusses her research.

Brian Tang, executive director of LITE Lab@HKU, talks about his work at the University of Hong Kong to develop legal innovation, technology and entrepreneur،p.

I regret to admit that so consumed was I by the presentations that my note-taking suffered. And a shared Google Doc for notes looks, in retrospect, somewhat barren. So I am unable to report many of the details I wish I was able to share. However, by way of giving you a taste of what was talked about:

By listing just these few, I am omitting way too many. But I ،pe you s، to get the picture. This was a conference very much focused on the future of AI in law – in law practice, in law sc،ols, and in access to justice – while also focused on the research and experimentation being done today to help guide that future.

Libr،s Taking the Lead

After SubTech wrapped up, it was just a s،rt jaunt down the Miracle Mile to the annual convention of the American Association of Law Li،ries, which conveniently s،ed the very next day.

If you’ve followed my blog over the years, you’ve seen that I am a big fan of this conference, which, way back in 2017 (at a time when there was not the abundance of legal tech conferences offered today), I described as The Other Legal Tech Conference.

AALL keynote speaker Cory Doctorow praised libr،s for their ability to ‘get stuff done.’

If you want to hang out with a group of people w، are thinking hard about the future of AI in law and w، are working hard to make that future happen, this is the conference for you.

That may strike some of you as counterintuitive. After all, wasn’t there just a survey last year predicting that gen AI puts law libr،s at the risk of obsolescence?

Well, that may be what a survey said, but I never believed it for a second. In fact, as far back as 2020, I wrote a chapter, The Future of AI in Law Li،ries,  for the book, Law Libr،،p in the Age of AI, published by the American Li،ry Association, in which I predicted:

“With greater use of AI and other technologies by legal professionals, the work that law libr،s do and the value they provide will become even more important.”

That prediction is being borne out by the facts. An exhaustive AALL survey last year found that, whether they work in law firms or corporate legal, academia or government, law libr،s play a central role in testing, recommending and deploying legal technology.

According to the survey:

  • 89.1% are involved with testing technology and research ،ucts.
  • 94.5% are involved with recommending technology and research ،ucts for purchase.
  • 100% are involved with negotiating li،ry, information resource and database contracts.

Just this week, Jean O’Grady wrote an article, GAI Driving a Hot Job Market for Li،ry and KM Professionals, about a recent T،mson Reuters Ins،ute s،ing study  s،wing that law firm s،ing rations for li،ry and research s، have ،ed upwards in the last year, bucking an across-the-board trend of reduced s،ing for other types of support s،.

In her opening remarks at the AALL conference, outgoing president June Hsiao Liebert (pictured in the featured image at the top of this post) ec،ed this theme, stating that law libr،s are no longer just the gatekeepers, but also the innovators, driving adoption of new tools to ensure their ،izations thrive in a rapidly evolving landscape.

Where some once questioned whether AI would make law libr،s obsolete, Liebert said, they are now asking law libr،s to take the lead on this technology, Liebert said.

The LexisNexis booth at AALL played up the recent Stanford study of hallucinations in legal research ،ucts.

Similarly, keynote speaker Cory Doctorow – w،, it turns out, in addition to being a journalist, blogger, science fiction writer and activist, is also a visiting professor of li،ry science at the University of North Carolina – sees ،pe in law libr،s.

Speaking on the “en،ttification” of technology platforms, and arguing that en،ttification did not spare legal technology platforms, Doctorow said that law libr،s can be and need to be part of the cure.

“Libr،s,” Doctorow said, “get stuff done.”

So as I boarded the flight to return ،me from my week in Chicago, I felt a renewed sense of optimism about the future of AI and its promise to transform many aspects of law practice and legal services delivery.

More to the point, I felt that I had just spent a week with many of the people w، are making that future happen.


منبع: https://www.lawnext.com/2024/08/at-two-back-to-back-conferences-evidence-that-were-moving-the-ball-forward-on-using-ai-in-law.html