

LegalTypist
38K posts

@LegalTypist
Word processing, data entry, and billing support services to law firms of all sizes. Follow for freebies. #dolawbetter #llawmas






















A lawsuit accusing Otter.ai of using recordings of private meetings to train its technology, as well as the increasing use of transcription tools, has spurred law firms and clients to think more critically about the AI services they use. “It's the tip of the iceberg. It is the thing that I'm getting the most client questions about, the most partner questions about,” Brooks Pierce associate Graham Dean told Legaltech News. “It's forced a lot of clients to think critically about how they're using AI, and now with Copilot being built in Microsoft Office and all that, the conversations are getting more complex, but I feel like it lit the fire of conversation around AI for a lot of smaller, mid-size businesses that hadn't really wrestled with it yet.” loom.ly/kSvJG1g

