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.
Covington's analysis examines the October 2024 National Security Memorandum requiring AISI to conduct voluntary preliminary testing of frontier AI models for national security threats including offensive cyber operations, biological/chemical weapons development, and autonomous malicious behavior. The assessment details new requirements for agencies to implement AI risk management practices, testing protocols, and classified evaluations while building on NIST's dual-use foundation model guidelines. This authoritative national security law analysis demonstrates how the Biden administration's AI NSM establishes comprehensive governance frameworks for military and intelligence AI deployment while requiring private sector cooperation in threat assessment and mitigation strategies.
This Harvard Law Review chapter tackles the “amoral drift” in AI corporate governance, warning that traditional tools—like board oversight and shareholder limits—fail to prevent companies like OpenAI and Anthropic from slipping toward profit-driven motives. It introduces the concept of “superstakeholders”—key talent and Big Tech backers whose equity-based influence can undermine an organization’s prosocial mission. The article also examines co-governance parallels, advocating democratic oversight structures that could anchor AI firms to ethical and societal objectives. Legal professionals and corporate counsel will want to dive into this piece to understand innovative governance mechanisms that balance existential AI risks with accountability.
This NCSL overview analyzes the surge of AI legislation across U.S. states in 2025, reporting on dozens of bills and task forces addressing everything from algorithmic bias to election disinformation. Legal practitioners will find this essential, as it synthesizes how states are shaping AI governance—providing insight into fast-moving, jurisdiction-specific trends and emerging compliance triggers. Click through to explore the full toolkit, tracked bills, and strategic guidance for navigating the evolving state-level legal landscape.
This Harvard Law Review “Developments in the Law” chapter examines the “creative double bind” that generative AI imposes on artists—offering powerful new tools while simultaneously threatening traditional copyright frameworks. It explores how this tension manifests differently across creative communities—from screenwriters to choreographers—depending on their varying attachments to existing IP protections. The piece spotlights how strategies like private negotiations, as seen in the WGA writers’ strike, could provide models for adapting copyright rules to balance innovation and protection . IP practitioners and policy experts will find this essential reading for its nuanced analysis and practical roadmap for navigating AI’s impact on creative industries—click through to explore its compelling doctrinal insights.
This Harvard Law Review article argues that current antidiscrimination laws—built for human decision-making—are ill-suited to handle algorithmic bias in the age of AI. It critiques the limitations of intent-based frameworks and disparate impact analysis under Supreme Court precedents, urging a doctrinal reset to ensure fairness in AI‑driven decision systems. The piece proposes modernizing legal tools—such as recalibrating Title VII and equal protection tests—to oversee AI outputs and mandate transparent auditing, empowering attorneys and regulators to combat hidden model unfairness. Legal professionals will want to read the full article to explore concrete strategies for integrating algorithmic accountability into established civil rights regimes.
The Harvard Law Review article advocates a co-governance model for AI regulation that involves governments, industry, civil society, and impacted communities working collaboratively. It argues traditional top-down rules fall short for AI’s complexity and urges transparency, inclusivity, and shared responsibility. This approach aims to balance innovation with accountability, embedding ethical oversight and continuous stakeholder dialogue. Legal professionals and policymakers will find this framework essential for crafting adaptable, equitable AI governance in an evolving tech landscape.