Eve optimizes your casework from intake to resolution. Seamlessly integrate an AI case assistant that optimizes your firm into an AI-native powerhouse - securely and responsibly.
ContractPodAi, a pioneer in legal GenAI with the Leah Intelligence Platform and a recognized leader in Contract Lifecycle Management, is on a mission to set the market standard for vertical intelligence in legal, redefining legal processes and offering real-time analysis on an unprecedented scale.
Contracts without a [contra]. We empower businesses to make contract workflows their competitive advantage. Their teams use fynk to create beautiful and re-usable contracts, fill them with dynamic data and conditional logic, collaborate and sign in real-time, while delivering a best-in-class experience to their customers.
Juro embeds AI contract automation in the tools business teams use every day, so they can agree and manage contracts end-to-end - while legal stays in control. Collaborative, flexible and data-rich, Juro works with some of the world's leading companies like Deliveroo, Remote and Trustpilot to accelerate legal workflow, automate routine contract tasks and gain better visibility into contract data.
Lexion was founded at a prestigious artificial intelligence research institute (AI2) and we’re backed by the same investors that funded OpenAI (Khosla Ventures), helped launch Amazon (Madrona Venture Group), and have advised Google (Wilson Sonsini).
Sirion’s end-to-end, enterprise-grade CLM solution drives digital transformation across the entire enterprise. Its AI-driven CLM technology is trusted by some of the world’s most successful organizations to manage 5 million+ contracts worth over $450 billion across 70+ countries.
Cardozo Law Review's empirical research demonstrates how AI hiring algorithms trained on predominantly male datasets systematically replicate gender bias, as seen in Amazon's algorithm that downgraded women candidates. The analysis reveals fundamental measurement challenges in employment AI unlike medical AI, where researchers cannot easily determine if rejected female candidates would outperform hired males. This academic study exposes the technical limitations of bias auditing in hiring contexts and calls for structural reforms to prevent AI from codifying historical workplace discrimination.
Comprehensive analysis of 13 global AI laws reveals unprecedented regulatory activity with U.S. states introducing 400+ AI bills in 2024, six times more than 2023, while the EU AI Act creates binding requirements for high-risk hiring systems. The research highlights critical compliance challenges as NYC's bias audit requirements, Colorado's impact assessments, and India's anti-discrimination mandates create a complex patchwork of overlapping obligations. HR professionals must navigate ADA accommodations, Title VII compliance, and emerging state-specific AI regulations while ensuring algorithmic fairness across diverse jurisdictions.
Oxford Journal's research reveals how AI developers have become increasingly secretive about training datasets as copyright litigation intensifies, prompting global calls for mandatory transparency requirements. The analysis examines the EU AI Act's groundbreaking training data disclosure mandates and G7 principles requiring transparency to protect intellectual property rights. This scholarly assessment demonstrates how transparency obligations could enable rightsholder enforcement while balancing innovation needs, offering a potential regulatory solution to the copyright-AI training data conflict.
Civil rights firm's analysis exposes how AI bias in hiring systematically discriminates against marginalized groups, with nearly 80% of employers now using AI recruitment tools despite documented gender and racial discrimination like Amazon's scrapped recruiting engine. The EEOC's new initiative to combat algorithmic discrimination reflects mounting legal challenges as biased datasets perpetuate workplace inequality across healthcare, employment, and lending. This practitioner perspective emphasizes the urgent need for human oversight and ethical AI frameworks to prevent civil rights violations in an increasingly automated hiring landscape.
USC's legal analysis explores landmark AI copyright litigation including Authors Guild v. OpenAI and NYT v. Microsoft, where publishers claim AI training violates copyright through unauthorized use of millions of articles. The piece contrasts China's progressive stance recognizing AI-generated content copyright with the U.S.'s unresolved fair use debates, highlighting how courts must balance AI innovation against creator rights. As proposed federal legislation like the Generative AI Copyright Disclosure Act advances, this analysis illuminates the critical legal battles shaping AI's future in creative industries.
The EU AI Act becomes enforceable law spanning 180 recitals and 113 articles, imposing maximum penalties of €35 million or 7% of worldwide annual turnover for non-compliance. The regulation's phased implementation begins with prohibited AI practices in February 2025, followed by transparency requirements for general-purpose AI models and full enforcement by August 2026. This comprehensive framework establishes the legal foundation for AI governance across all 27 EU member states, creating immediate compliance obligations for any organization deploying AI systems that impact EU markets.