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Legal AI Live

(27) Legal AI Live, April 2026, Part 1

30 min · 27 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio (27) Legal AI Live, April 2026, Part 1

Descripción

This Episode’s Top 5 Takeaways: * AI is reducing the need for junior lawyers. Multiple panelists noted a growing acknowledgment (including from Jordan Furlong’s ABA Tech Show keynote) that law firms may need fewer associates as AI handles tasks traditionally given to first-years. Some smaller firms are already hiring lawyers at paralegal rates and requiring AI use in all work. * Legal tech is moving to where lawyers already work. Mathew Kerbis highlighted a trend at ABA Tech Show of tools being built inside email and Word, rather than standalone platforms. Tools like Candle AI and TwinCounsel stood out as building for lawyers’ existing workflows. * Anthropic’s “Mythos” model is raising alarm bells. The panel discussed Anthropic’s new model as a significant moment — powerful enough that it reportedly triggered an urgent meeting between Treasury Secretary Bessent, Fed Chair Powell, and Wall Street leaders. Even Claude itself didn’t know about Mythos yet when asked. * AI agents are enabling autonomous, parallel work. Damien Riehl described running five AI agents simultaneously building web applications while on vacation in Mexico, converting his WordPress site to static files on Cloudflare and cutting his hosting bill from $300/year to $0. He also maxed out his $200/month Claude plan — a rare feat. * Privacy, cybersecurity, and AI compliance are converging. Nicole Morris, fresh from the IAPP Global Summit, observed that lawyers and law schools are too siloed to handle AI compliance, which increasingly requires integrated knowledge of privacy, cybersecurity, and AI law together — a major gap in legal education and practice. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.legalailive.com [https://www.legalailive.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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30 episodios

episode (30) Legal AI Live, May 2026, Part 2 artwork

(30) Legal AI Live, May 2026, Part 2

This Episode’s Top 5 Takeaways: * Proof of humanity in AI-generated content. Shorter, burstier writing with natural quirks (typos, run-ons, personal style deviations) signals authenticity. Long, perfectly structured posts are increasingly read as AI slop. * Open source vs. enterprise AI is a false dichotomy. Tools like MikeOSS aren’t eating Harvey’s or Legora’s lunch; they’re expanding the market to users who could never afford enterprise licenses. Different tools serve different addressable markets. * Vibe coding is accessible but unpredictable. Mathew built a custom app using Perplexity in ~3 hours for $15, orchestrating AI tools against each other. The cost and time savings are real, but the process is nonlinear and can break. * Human taste and expertise still matter. AI output is “pretty good,” but the value-add is curation and judgment (Nick’s 83-year-old father reviewing an AI-drafted lease addendum). The shift may be toward “service as a service” — humans guiding AI rather than just using software. * AI is transforming education. Nick highlighted that AI has made learning more accessible than ever, particularly for people with learning differences like dyslexia, calling it the best educational experience of his life. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.legalailive.com [https://www.legalailive.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

1 de jun de 202627 min
episode (29) Legal AI Live, May 2026, Part 1 artwork

(29) Legal AI Live, May 2026, Part 1

This Episode’s Top 5 Takeaways: * The lump of labor fallacy is real: AI creates more work, not less. Lawyers using AI aren’t doing less work; they’re taking on more complex, higher-value tasks that were previously impossible or impractical. Jason did sophisticated flat-fee pricing analysis in hours; Greg produced 100 hours of data work in 5–10. * Taste and curation are the new superpowers. Mathew’s talk “Curation and Taste Are Your Superpowers” captures the shift: AI commoditizes execution, so what differentiates you is judgment, taste, and knowing what good output looks like. Tools like Marbelism win by curating pre-built AI workflows so users don’t have to. * Human authenticity is increasingly valuable and detectable. LinkedIn is actively deprioritizing generic AI content. Cat warns of homogenization (”dead internet theory”) and argues that leaning into your own voice is now essential. Nick revived his podcast specifically because human-visible, consistent content cuts through the AI slop deluge. * Ideas can now be turned into reality at near-zero cost. Damien’s “any jerk can have an idea, but execution is expensive” is no longer true. Vibe coding turns ideas into software; one prompt turns a research paper into a polished PowerPoint. The bottleneck has shifted entirely to ideation and taste. * The skills gap is widening dangerously. Cat highlights a 56% wage premium for those with real AI experience vs. dabblers. Access is universal now; capability is not. Those who understand how to build, steer, and evolve AI systems are pulling ahead of those who just use them casually. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.legalailive.com [https://www.legalailive.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

25 de may de 202632 min
episode (28) Legal AI Live, April 2026, Part 2 artwork

(28) Legal AI Live, April 2026, Part 2

This Episode’s Top 5 Takeaways: * The traditional law firm business model is collapsing. Nicole Morris was blunt: the idea that AI-trained associates will simply bill out at higher rates won’t save the model. She believes the collapse is already underway and accelerating. Damien noted that freed-up junior lawyers could instead serve the 92% of unmet legal needs by going downmarket. * AI agents are still in the “HTML era” — powerful but not yet accessible. The panel largely agreed that agents are cutting-edge and mostly used by tech-savvy early adopters. Security concerns, complex setup, and governance risks are keeping mainstream law firms on the sidelines. But Damien compared today to early web development: guardrails (like NVIDIA’s sandboxed open-source version) will eventually make agents as easy as Wix made websites. * Damien’s vision of the “agentic law firm” is arriving. He described a multi-bot workflow: an associate bot spots issues, researches, and maps facts to legal elements → a partner bot critiques → an opposing counsel bot stress-tests → 10-100 judge bots render verdicts — all before any human sees the work. The panel agreed this is where the profession is headed, even if most aren’t there yet. * Harvey is now priced for small firms — $25K/year for 5 seats. Mathew revealed pricing he learned at ABA Tech Show: $5,000/seat/year (~$417/month), with a minimum of 5 seats. He was pleasantly surprised, though noted it still excludes true solos and that building agentic workflows inside Harvey is too complex without their concierge support. * The future of legal AI is vertical and meeting lawyers where they work. The panel’s parting shots converged: legal AI tools that focus on a single practice area (litigation, transactional, etc.) will gain faster adoption, while tools embedded directly into lawyers’ existing workflows (Word, Google Workspace, email, MCP for Claude) remove the friction of adoption. Mathew’s analogy: like Calendly vs. Google Appointments — best-of-breed vertical tools win on depth. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.legalailive.com [https://www.legalailive.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

4 de may de 202626 min
episode (27) Legal AI Live, April 2026, Part 1 artwork

(27) Legal AI Live, April 2026, Part 1

This Episode’s Top 5 Takeaways: * AI is reducing the need for junior lawyers. Multiple panelists noted a growing acknowledgment (including from Jordan Furlong’s ABA Tech Show keynote) that law firms may need fewer associates as AI handles tasks traditionally given to first-years. Some smaller firms are already hiring lawyers at paralegal rates and requiring AI use in all work. * Legal tech is moving to where lawyers already work. Mathew Kerbis highlighted a trend at ABA Tech Show of tools being built inside email and Word, rather than standalone platforms. Tools like Candle AI and TwinCounsel stood out as building for lawyers’ existing workflows. * Anthropic’s “Mythos” model is raising alarm bells. The panel discussed Anthropic’s new model as a significant moment — powerful enough that it reportedly triggered an urgent meeting between Treasury Secretary Bessent, Fed Chair Powell, and Wall Street leaders. Even Claude itself didn’t know about Mythos yet when asked. * AI agents are enabling autonomous, parallel work. Damien Riehl described running five AI agents simultaneously building web applications while on vacation in Mexico, converting his WordPress site to static files on Cloudflare and cutting his hosting bill from $300/year to $0. He also maxed out his $200/month Claude plan — a rare feat. * Privacy, cybersecurity, and AI compliance are converging. Nicole Morris, fresh from the IAPP Global Summit, observed that lawyers and law schools are too siloed to handle AI compliance, which increasingly requires integrated knowledge of privacy, cybersecurity, and AI law together — a major gap in legal education and practice. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.legalailive.com [https://www.legalailive.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

27 de abr de 202630 min
episode (26) Legal AI Live, March 2026, Part 2 artwork

(26) Legal AI Live, March 2026, Part 2

Here are the top 5 takeaways: * Access to legal data is a fundamental justice problem. Downloading all motions, briefs, and pleadings from PACER would cost ~$2 billion. Damien argued this creates a two-tiered justice system where only well-funded parties can afford the data needed to use predictive AI tools effectively — and that the courts themselves bear responsibility for that inequity. * AI can already build a statistically optimized legal strategy. Damien demonstrated live that tools exist today to analyze thousands of judicial opinions, identify which arguments “tickle a judge’s brain,” and generate motions statistically tailored to win in front of a specific judge. This has been possible for six years — most lawyers just haven’t caught up. * The “associate bot” pipeline is trivially buildable right now. Damien described a fully automated AI workflow: issue spot → research → draft → partner review → opposing counsel attack → judge simulation — running hundreds of iterations before a human ever sees it. His point: people dismissing AI as “not ready” don’t see the train coming. * AI could expose and reduce judicial bias. Data already shows female litigators win ~10% less often regardless of the judge’s gender. As both sides start using predictive tools, judges will be more accountable and scrutinized — potentially forcing more consistent, data-grounded rulings. Greg noted judges could even use the same data to self-audit their own biases. * Human advocacy and persuasion still matter. Damien used the tobacco cases as a counterexample: no amount of data would have won the day — it took a skilled litigator’s ability to convince a single judge. The panel agreed that while AI levels the playing field on data, uniquely human persuasion and judgment still have a role, especially in high-stakes, novel situations. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.legalailive.com [https://www.legalailive.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

6 de abr de 202627 min