The Next Wave of Canadian Legal AI Began in 1965
From the article
Take a moment to thank Eric Appleby, founder of Maritime Law Book, because the Canadian legal AI future announced today by Clio is only possible because Eric was sufficiently frustrated by the lack of access to New Brunswick case law in the 1960s that he decided to start a legal publishing company. No Eric, no MLB. No MLB, no Canadian case law in Clio and no next wave of Canadian legal AI. You know the saying attributed to Nelson Mandela that begins “the best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago?” Well, the tree now bearing fruit is . . . [more] The post The Next Wave of Canadian Legal AI Began in 1965 appeared first on Slaw .
Continue reading on slaw.caYou might also wanna read

Beyond Fake Cases: The Other Ways AI Is Going Wrong in Canadian Courts
slaw.ca·3d ago

Essential Legal AI Integration: A Guide for Attorneys
QuantoSei·8d ago
Three Critical Questions Law Firms Should Ask Before Adopting AI Tools
This article discusses the challenge law firms face with AI demonstrations that are technically impressive but may not address practical imp
Free Movement launches AI-powered research toolkit for immigration law professionals
The article announces the launch of a suite of four AI-powered research tools designed to assist immigration lawyers and professionals in th
freemovement.org.uk·23d agoCalifornia courts test AI tool for drafting orders, raising transparency concerns in criminal cases
Two of California's largest courts (Los Angeles and Riverside counties) are piloting an AI tool called Learned Hand that can draft orders an
Silex: Swiss Legal AI Research Assistant for Legal Professionals
Silex is a Swiss legal AI research assistant designed specifically for legal professionals in Switzerland. Formerly known as Ex Nunc Intelli

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.