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The process of free artificial intelligence has begun in the Turkish judiciary! - Game News 24

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A decision into develop a peer-reviewed search engine with artificial intelligence has launched a four-step movement to eliminate the problem that young lawyers cannot access paid legal services. In the second step, they put forth actions amongst other industry stakeholders in the field of legal technologies. According to the data obtained, they plan on transferring ten percent of the income obtained in the third step to a fund. They want to make purchases for lawyers who aren't able to buy legal technologies with this fund. After diversifying their income models, they want to open the free version of the dejure.ai



Could your next lawyer be a robot? Tech firms making case for artificial intelligence

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Early in his career, Andrew Hall, an old-school Miami attorney whose Coconut Grove firm has sued governments from Cuba to Sudan, worked on a lawsuit that lasted three full years. The case was cartoonishly complex. The Vietnam War was sputtering to an end and McDonnell Douglas Aircraft, then America's largest manufacturer of jet airplanes, had defaulted on a contract involving the delivery of 99 jets to Eastern Airlines. There were over a million documents put into evidence and almost 300 witnesses. The massive operation employed so many lawyers, clerks and paralegals, they resembled a legal militia more than a legal team.


The Legal Tech Pioneer Bars of Belgium

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As part of Artificial Lawyer's continuing series about emerging legal tech markets around the world, today's guest post about Belgium is brought to us by Tom Pieters, a lawyer at Belgian law firm AdvoDender. He is also a member of COMMIT (Committee on IT) and A.I.-D.I. (Committee on Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation) of the Flemish Bar Association. On October 27, 2016 Artificial Lawyer published a guest article by Dutch lawyer Niek van de Pasch on the quickly growing legal tech scene in Holland. It was a very interesting read, but it only added to my growing sense of unease, a feeling that started upon my discovery of Dutch Legal Tech in February 2016. I have been interested in all things tech for a very long time.

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How artificial intelligence is changing the way lawyers practice law (podcast)

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Julie Sobowale is a freelance journalist and lawyer based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, specializing in legal reporting. She writes about trends in the legal industry including legal technology, innovation, entrepreneurship, diversity and major shifts in legal culture. Her work has appeared in publications from the American Bar Association, the Canadian Bar Association, the Canadian Corporate Council Association, Canadian Lawyer and the Nova Scotia Barristers Society. She's also given presentations on legal trends, alternative careers and legal education. She graduated from the Dalhousie Schulich School of Law in 2012 and was the recipient of the Dalhousie Faculty of Law Leadership Award.