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Edge
Edge

Edge is a company based in San Francisco that specializes in AI-driven patent writing tools. Edge aims to streamline the patent drafting process, helping inventors and legal professionals create high-quality patents more efficiently. The company's software assists in drafting claims, descriptions, and backgrounds for patents, potentially reducing errors and improving the overall quality of patent applications.

AI Tools & Software
Garden
Garden

Garden Intelligence is an AI-powered platform designed to streamline and enhance the patent process for various stakeholders, including R&D organizations, inventors, patent prosecutors, and litigators. It combines AI reasoning models, a patent search index, and web scraping to provide tools for tasks such as invalidity searches, claim chart generation, and infringement analysis.

AI Tools & Software
DeepIP
DeepIP

DeepIP, an AI-powered personal assistant designed to streamline the patent drafting process and manage responses to office actions. It aims to free intellectual property (IP) practitioners from tedious tasks, allowing them to focus on delivering greater value to their clients. DeepIP can summarize lengthy documents quickly, providing essential insights at a glance.

AI Tools & Software
Patlytics
Patlytics

Patlytics a company specializing in AI-powered patent intelligence solutions. Patlytics offers a platform that assists with various aspects of the patent lifecycle, including patent drafting, prosecution, litigation, and portfolio management. The platform leverages AI and large language models (LLMs) to streamline patent-related processes and enhance efficiency for IP professionals.

AI Tools & Software
Patented AI
Patented AI

Patented AI provides an essential tool to help individuals and companies protect against inadvertently sharing personal identifying information, trade secrets, and all other sensitive data with virtually all LLMs, enabling individuals across all industries to get on-device sensitive data checks and protection.

AI Tools & Software
IP Copilot
IP Copilot

IP Copilot is an AI-powered platform designed to revolutionize intellectual property (IP) management, helping organizations discover, capture, curate, and protect their IP more efficiently. It uses AI to streamline the invention disclosure process, perform real-time prior art searches, and facilitate quick filing decisions.

AI Tools & Software

AI Law Articles, Reports & Other Publications

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Seizing Global AI Regulation: Chips for Peace as America’s Last Call to Lead
Seizing Global AI Regulation: Chips for Peace as America’s Last Call to Lead
AI Publications

This Harvard Journal of Law & Technology digest makes a bold case for the U.S. and its allies to shift from abstract AI policy debates to a concrete “Chips for Peace” framework—tying frontier-AI regulation, export controls, and benefit-sharing to prevent high-stakes misuse. It outlines three strategic pillars—catastrophe prevention, equitable prosperity, and coordinated governance—to leverage AI chip supply chains for global stability. Legal professionals and policymakers will find this compelling: it transforms chip controls into a diplomatic lever and calls for enforceable standards that go beyond national borders. This piece matters because it translates geopolitical tensions into a proactive legal strategy with real-world tools—click through to explore how your firm can navigate and shape the next generation of AI governance.

An Early Win for Copyright Owners in AI Cases as Court Rejects Fair Use Defense
An Early Win for Copyright Owners in AI Cases as Court Rejects Fair Use Defense
AI Publications

This insightful analysis by Megan Bannigan, Christopher S. Ford, Samuel J. Allaman, and Abigail Liles examines a pivotal February 2025 Delaware District Court ruling in Thomson Reuters v. ROSS Intelligence, where the court granted summary judgment for Thomson Reuters on direct copyright infringement and rejected ROSS’s fair use defense. A key takeaway is that courts may treat unlicensed training of AI models on copyrighted works as non-transformative, with commercial use and market harm outweighing internal-only access arguments. Timing matters: this decision offers a strong early signal that fair use defenses in AI-focused copyright litigation may face steep judicial scrutiny. For IP counsel and AI developers, the article offers actionable clarity on how fair use factors—especially purpose, transformation, and market impact—are being applied in emerging AI cases, making it essential reading for legal professionals navigating generative AI risk.

Stabilizing Alice for Abstract Ideas: a Case for Federal Circuit to Turn to USPTO Guidance
Stabilizing Alice for Abstract Ideas: a Case for Federal Circuit to Turn to USPTO Guidance
AI Publications

This Harvard Journal of Law & Technology digest argues that the Federal Circuit should adopt USPTO’s subject‑matter guidance to resolve the nagging inconsistencies from Alice in determining abstract‑idea patent eligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101. It explains how courts currently struggle with a unified test—highlighting the fragmented judicial analyses and urging systematic classification of abstract‑idea categories at Step One . By leaning on PTO guidance for “groupings of subject matter” and “practical application” tests, the piece shows how the Federal Circuit could enhance predictability in § 101 decisions. IP practitioners and patent litigators will find this argument compelling and practical—it offers a clear pathway to untangle abstract‑idea ambiguity and fortify drafting and litigation strategies.

Managing Cybersecurity Risks Arising from AI – New Guidance from the NYDFS
Managing Cybersecurity Risks Arising from AI – New Guidance from the NYDFS
AI Publications

The article outlines the NYDFS’s October 16, 2024 Industry Letter, which leverages existing 23 NYCRR Part 500 frameworks to guide financial institutions on managing cybersecurity risks tied to AI—including deepfake-enabled social engineering, third-party vendor risk, and AI-as-threat vector. It emphasizes how firms should integrate AI-specific controls—like deepfake-resistant MFA, annual AI‑risk assessments, vendor due‑diligence, and AI‑awareness training—without introducing new regulations . Legal professionals and compliance teams will find this essential for updating governance frameworks, tightening vendor contracts, and ensuring regulatory adherence. Click through for a practical roadmap on aligning your cybersecurity programs with evolving AI‑driven threats.

Bias and Ethics in AI-Enabled Legal Technology: Examining the Role and Impact of Human Inputs on AI-Rendered Results in Legal Matters
Bias and Ethics in AI-Enabled Legal Technology: Examining the Role and Impact of Human Inputs on AI-Rendered Results in Legal Matters
AI Publications

Yale Journal of Law & Technology’s article delves into the ethical and bias challenges in AI‑powered legal tools, dissecting how human inputs—from data selection to prompting—profoundly shape AI outputs. It spotlights the tension between efficiency gains and the risk of automated errors, offering legal professionals a roadmap to evaluate when and how to retain human oversight. This piece matters because it equips lawyers and compliance teams with actionable insights to design fair, defensible AI workflows. Dive into the full analysis to understand the mechanics driving bias and how to implement guardrails that uphold integrity and trust.

China: A landmark court ruling on copyright protection for AI-generated works
China: A landmark court ruling on copyright protection for AI-generated works
AI Publications

This article highlights a “landmark” November 2023 ruling by the Beijing Internet Court, which for the first time confirmed that AI‑generated images—specifically those produced via Stable Diffusion with creative prompting and refinement—can qualify for copyright under Chinese law. It explains how the court analysed key concepts like “originality” and “intellectual achievement,” crediting the prompt engineer—not the AI model—as the true author. The ruling signals China’s judicial readiness to grapple with AI‑driven creativity and sets an actionable precedent for IP ownership in generative AI cases. Legal professionals will find its deep dive into authorship criteria especially relevant. Click through to explore the court’s detailed reasoning and its implications for future AI‑related IP strategy.

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