Evisort offers the next generation of AI-powered contract intelligence. Evisort’s AI platform for contract lifecycle management and analysis connects contract data, unlocks productivity, and delivers digital workflows that create great experiences across the enterprise.
Uncover combines decades of litigation experience with the newest technological enhancements to accelerate long overdue digitisation in the litigation workflow, freeing up substantial amounts of precious time for lawyers to drive efficiency and focus on strategy.
Corpora empowers founders and lawyers with the resources they need to get legal done: Smart Legal Drive helps the startup keep all of its legal documents in one repository – organized, accurate, and complete – and gives alerts in case certain important documents are missing. AI Assistant helps founders get plain language, actionable insights to their startup law questions.
Summize is pioneering true digital contracting with a CLM solution that puts the user experience first. It takes a deliberately different approach by embedding workflows directly into existing technologies that you (and your business) already know and use daily, including Outlook, Gmail, HubSpot, Teams, Slack and Word.
Ironclad is the smart way to make and manage digital business contracts. It's the only platform flexible enough to handle every type of contract workflow, whether a sales agreement, an HR agreement or a complex NDA.
Avokaado revolutionizes business operations with its new category product, the Operational Intelligence Platform (OIP). By leveraging the power of data-driven smart document format aDoc, artificial intelligence, and automation, Avokaado delivers unparalleled efficiency and intelligence in contract and document management across all business functions.
Texas's proposed Responsible AI Governance Act represents the next wave of comprehensive state AI legislation following Colorado and Utah's pioneering laws, with healthcare-specific provisions requiring transparency and risk management. The analysis reveals a regulatory landscape in flux as Trump's administration reverses Biden's AI oversight policies, leaving states to fill federal gaps with varying approaches from California's strict safety measures to Texas's innovation-friendly frameworks. Healthcare AI companies must develop agile compliance systems as the regulatory patchwork intensifies, particularly given potential federal preemption challenges that could reshape the entire state-level AI governance landscape.
Stanford Law School's comprehensive analysis reveals that while legal tech has attracted $700 million in AI startup funding since early 2023, structural barriers persist in law firm adoption. The report identifies technical solutions like retrieval augmentation and guardrails addressing accuracy and privacy concerns, but highlights fundamental challenges including billable hour models and incumbent dominance. For legal tech entrepreneurs, the key insight is positioning as partners rather than competitors to established players, particularly in specialized domains like IP and compliance where opportunities remain most promising.
The FTC launches 'Operation AI Comply,' targeting companies using AI to deceive consumers, including fake review generators and fraudulent 'AI lawyer' services. This landmark enforcement sweep demonstrates that existing consumer protection laws apply fully to AI technologies, with penalties reaching $193,000 for DoNotPay's false claims about replacing human lawyers. The action establishes critical precedent for AI accountability and signals intensified federal oversight of AI marketing claims, making compliance frameworks essential for AI companies.
MultiState's comprehensive state law tracking reveals that 14 states have enacted nonconsensual sexual deepfake laws while 10 states regulate political campaign deepfakes, with Tennessee's ELVIS Act becoming the first to protect musical artists from AI voice mimicry. The analysis details how generative AI tools have democratized deepfake creation, making realistic impersonations accessible to anyone while examining industry-specific protections for Hollywood actors and fashion models. This specialized policy analysis demonstrates the expanding scope of state deepfake legislation beyond traditional categories, emphasizing the need for comprehensive tracking as lawmakers respond to AI-induced job displacement and protection of individual likeness rights across entertainment and other sectors.
WEF's analysis reveals how the FTC is drafting new laws to criminalize harmful deepfake production and distribution in response to rising AI-enabled fraud and the 2024 election cycle, including a Biden voice deepfake targeting New Hampshire voters. The assessment connects deepfakes to broader democratic threats including misinformation ranked as the top global risk for 2024, while highlighting how these technologies can erode public trust in government, media, and institutions. This global policy perspective emphasizes the Forum's Digital Trust Initiative and Global Coalition for Digital Safety efforts to combat disinformation through whole-of-society approaches building media literacy and technological safeguards.
Reuters Practical Law's comprehensive regulatory analysis tracks federal legislation including the NO FAKES Act and No AI FRAUD Act while examining state-level deepfake regulation covering defamation, privacy breaches, and election interference. The assessment details how generative adversarial networks create increasingly sophisticated synthetic media through competing generator and discriminator systems, while highlighting artist advocacy like FKA twigs' Congressional testimony on identity control. This authoritative legal practice guide emphasizes that while no comprehensive federal deepfake legislation exists, the IOGAN Act requires NSF research support for detection standards as Congress considers broader regulatory frameworks addressing creation, disclosure, and dissemination of digital forgeries.