Robots in Law: How Artificial Intelligence is Transforming Legal Services
Ark Group (Verlag)
978-1-78358-264-8 (ISBN)
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Although 2016 was the breakthrough year for artificial intelligence (AI) in legal services in terms of market awareness and significant take-up, legal AI represents evolution rather than revolution. Since the first `robot lawyers’ started receiving mainstream press coverage, many law firms, other legal service providers, and law colleges are being asked what they are doing about AI.
Robots in Law: How Artificial Intelligence is Transforming Legal Services is designed to provide a starting point in the form of an independent primer for anyone looking to get up to speed on AI in legal services.
The book is organized into four distinct sections:
Part I: Legal AI – Beyond the hype
Part II: Putting AI to work
Part III: AI giving back – Return on investment
Part IV: Looking ahead
The first three present an in-depth overview, and analysis, of the current legal AI landscape; the final section includes contributions from AI experts with connections to the legal space, on the prospects for legal AI in the short-term future.
"AI is here now. And going to work in law firms. In the second half of 2016, hardly a week went by without some firm, academic or start-up announcing an innovation. Anyone inclined to dismiss this entirely as hype should read Robots in Law. In 150-odd pages we get a clear round-up of what is happening plus (perhaps more interestingly) some predictions from the best human brains in the business about what it all means." - Michael Cross, editor, The Law Society Gazette
Along with the emergence of New Law and the burgeoning lawtech start-up economy, AI is part of a new dynamic in legal technology and it is here to stay.
The question now is whether AI will find its place as a facilitator of legal services delivery, or whether it will initiate a shift in the value chain that will transform the legal business model.
"This book, is recommended for all those wanting to catch up with AI, or those needing to catch up (whether they want to or not). That is pretty much all of us." - Laurence Eastham, Editor of Computers & Law, The Society for Computers and Law Magazine
Joanna Goodman is a freelance journalist, writer, and author. She covers business and technology topics for national publications and blue-chip corporates. She is the IT columnist for the Law Society Gazette and writes regular features for The Guardian about cutting-edge technology, brands, and media. Her favourite topics include artificial intelligence, robots and chatbots, virtual assistants, connected devices, driverless cars, and virtual and augmented reality – and she’s always interested in finding out about technology that’s new and different. Her professional life reflects her interests in technology, books, art, and design. Joanna has written several short films and an independent feature film, Alfheim’s Edge (2016). She has an MBA in strategic management from Kingston University. Joanna is based in London. She likes films, going to dance classes, and travelling to new destinations.
Foreword
By Richard Tromans, innovation consultant to law fi rms at TromansConsulting and editor of Artifi cialLawyer.com
Introduction
Executive summary
About the author
Acknowledgements
Part 1: Legal AI – Beyond the hype
Chapter 1: Defining legal AI
What is AI?
Why is AI so hot right now?
Research and legal AI
Where does AI fi t into legal IT?
Robots in law – A few examples!
Chapter 2: From BI to AI
BI and big data
AI’s two-factor authentication
The AI of BI – and the BI of AI!
Get the BI right first
From dashboard to conversation
Part 2: Putting AI to work
Chapter 3: Legal research – Virtual assistants
Contract robots – Beyond automation
Machine learning… and teaching
The conversational assistant
Machine learning is at the heart of legal AI
Chapter 4: `Driverless’ law – An intelligent platform for legal services
Robot lawyers – The legal chatbot
From document automation to driverless law
Self-driving platforms?
Pay-as-you-go AI
Narrow AI as a service
Corporate legal drives AI as a service
Chapter 5: AI first – Service as software
AI as a platform – Riverview Law
AI-powered apps – Neota Logic
AI collaboration
A portfolio approach to legal AI
Part 3: AI giving back – Return on investment
Chapter 6: AI and lawtech start-ups
The lawtech start-up phenomenon
Global communities
Investors and incubators
Start-up tips from TrademarkNow
Start-up tips from Seedcamp
Chapter 7: AI for good
Brainstorming for good
Chatbots extend access to legal advice
Robot justice
Chapter 8: AI challenges
Legal, ethical, and regulatory considerations
Implementation challenges
Disrupting the law firm value chain
Strategic choices
Building AI into law firm culture
Part 4: Looking ahead… but not too far!
Chapter 9: Legal AI – Creating the future
Can AI drive client centricity?
Unleashing the true potential of AI – Building the exponential law fi rm
A global perspective on legal AI
Chapter 10: Robot lawyers – A new chapter in legal IT
Beyond the hype – Transforming, but not taking over
Erscheinungsdatum | 05.09.2018 |
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Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Recht / Steuern ► EU / Internationales Recht |
Recht / Steuern ► Privatrecht / Bürgerliches Recht ► Berufs-/Gebührenrecht | |
ISBN-10 | 1-78358-264-2 / 1783582642 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-78358-264-8 / 9781783582648 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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