How artificial intelligence is transforming the legal profession
How artificial intelligence is transforming the legal profession The future of the legal profession began 20 years ago. The technology boom was just beginning with the emergence of email and personal computers. Jay Leib was working for Record Technologies Inc. as director of software sales and training in 1999, and the company was scanning documents into databases for clients. At one point the company printed and scanned legal documents related to a lawsuit with Microsoft. Leib thought that was inefficient, a waste of time and paper. So he and his business partner, Dan Roth, decided to create a program that would help lawyers manage electronic documents for litigation. Their idea led them to purchase an e-discovery application. By 2000, Leib and his partner launched their own creation, Discovery Cracker. "We saw a gap in the marketplace," Leib says. Lawyers need tools to keep up with it." Instead of wading through piles of paper, lawyers now deal with terabytes of data and hundreds of ...
Nov-29-2016, 17:55:04 GMT
- Country:
- Europe > United Kingdom (0.04)
- North America
- United States
- New Jersey (0.04)
- Michigan (0.04)
- Illinois > Cook County
- Chicago (0.05)
- California
- Santa Clara County > Palo Alto (0.04)
- San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.04)
- Canada
- Ontario > Toronto (0.04)
- Nova Scotia > Halifax Regional Municipality
- Halifax (0.04)
- United States
- Asia > Middle East
- Jordan (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.46)
- Industry:
- Law > Litigation (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government
- North America Government (0.46)
- Technology: