Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
A Florida federal judge on Thursday tossed four lawsuits that a disinfectant sprayer company brought against former executives and business associates after filings with fake legal citations produced by artificial intelligence were included in the record, saying the attorney who filed the documents violated duties owed to his clients.
Fourteen months after California Supreme Court Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero first convened a task force to study potential benefits and risks of using artificial intelligence in the court system, the Judicial Council of California is poised Friday to consider the proposed rules and standards the task force developed.
Robot Consulting Co. Ltd. made its debut on the Nasdaq Capital Market on Thursday, becoming one of the first legal technology companies to go public in nearly three years with an initial public offering aimed at raising $15 million.
A Connecticut state court judge has directed U.S. Bancorp and internet service provider NetSpeed to provide documentation to an attorney who is alleging his identity was stolen and used to open fraudulent bank accounts.
Miami-headquartered national law firm Zumpano Patricios is facing a proposed class action in Florida federal court accusing the firm of failing to protect sensitive information, including dates of birth and healthcare payments, that was compromised in a May data breach.
The lack of scientific educational backgrounds among federal judges is raising concerns among some experts about the courts' ability to handle technically complex questions in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's Loper Bright ruling, though others argue that judges are meant to be and should remain generalists.
Dye & Durham Ltd. has pushed back against whistleblower allegations by a company linked to its former CEO, asserting that the claims are an attempt to disrupt the company's ongoing turnaround efforts and distract its board of directors.
In-house and law firm leaders are finding many different ways to use legal and nonlegal generative artificial intelligence tools in their law practices, according to a panel hosted by contract management platform Ironclad.
Provable, a company focused on developing products for compliant, confidential payments and creating tools for developers to use on the Aleo blockchain, has added a former CoinList legal leader as its general counsel.
Connecticut Trial Firm LLC co-founder Andrew Garza may pursue a bill of discovery against internet service provider NetSpeed LLC as he tries to unmask the person he says stole his identity to open a bank account, a Connecticut state judge has ruled.
San Francisco-based legal tech startup Tavrn, which offers law firms an artificial intelligence platform to speed up document review, announced Tuesday the raising of $15 million in a Series A funding round led by Left Lane Capital.
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP has expanded its professional team by adding an attorney with expertise in artificial intelligence to grow the firm's technology resources.
New York-based firm Covenant, a legal counseling service for private market investors that relies on artificial intelligence, announced Tuesday the raising of a $4 million seed funding round.
A legal technology startup that developed an artificial intelligence platform for litigation tasks has raised $10 million in investments, it announced Tuesday, adding that it plans to rapidly expand its team.
Artificial intelligence provider EvenUp, which reached a valuation of more than $1 billion late last year, has moved to a new office in San Francisco, reestablishing its headquarters in the city's Financial District.
The challenges facing law firm leaders at the start of the second half of 2025 are numerous, from a tumultuous geopolitical environment, to an uncertain economy, to massive technological advances. Seven leaders reveal the biggest challenges weighing on their minds right now.
The number of law firm reviews written by artificial intelligence has skyrocketed in recent years, a trend that could pose legal ethical challenges, according to one expert.
Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP said Monday that it has launched its own artificial intelligence assistant as a growing number of law firms are using the new technology to "augment" the way they deliver legal services.
For 25 years, the nonprofit Pro Bono Net has worked to utilize technology to aid pro bono litigants nationwide. On Monday, new executive director Zach Zarnow took the reins as executive director of the organization. Here, Zarnow shares the challenges and opportunities Pro Bono Net faces as it looks ahead to its next quarter century.
A legal technology company's first acquisition following a major capital raise tops this roundup of recent industry news.
The legal industry continued July with another busy week as attorneys took on new roles and firms expanded practices. Test your legal news savvy here with Law360 Pulse's weekly quiz.
Funding for legal technology companies surged 44% year-over-year to about $3.56 billion in the first half of 2025, thanks in part to general-purpose artificial intelligence platforms for lawyers.
A former teacher turned litigator turned e-discovery expert for Cozen O'Connor recently wrote the American Bar Association's book on handling electronic discovery. Nicole Marie Gill spoke to Law360 Pulse about the project and why learning the ropes of e-discovery is so important for early-career attorneys.
Miles & Stockbridge PC is adopting legal business management software from Atlanta-based Aderant to make processes like timekeeping and billing more efficient while providing generative artificial intelligence tools to its attorneys and staff, a move a firm leader said gives attorneys "information at their fingertips."
In a recent interview with Law360 Pulse, John Lee said the knowledge of how lawyers do their work is the biggest value he brings to his general counsel position at legal operations startup Ruli AI. When he speaks with his senior legal industry customers, Lee said he's able to share anecdotes from his own roles, acting as what he referred to as a lawyer-to-lawyer bridge.