Episode 013 BigLaw, Privilege and an Unexpected "Wow!" Moment
When AI becomes a privilege problem, most lawyers are still treating it like a productivity hack.
Solo and small firm attorneys hear constantly that AI saves time. What they hear far less often is that the AI tool they chose — and more specifically, the tier they're using — may have just waived their client's privilege. This episode forces that conversation. If you're putting client material into any AI tool without understanding exactly how that tool handles your data, you're not just taking a risk — you're potentially handing opposing counsel a gift.
In this episode:
* Why the tier of AI tool you're using (free, Pro, Enterprise) is a privilege and confidentiality issue, not just a performance issue
* The U.S. v. Heppner case: how using Claude at the Pro tier — not Enterprise — led to a court finding that confidential materials weren't protected
* The Trembly v. OpenAI case (2024 U.S. Dist. Lexis 141362) and what it establishes about AI outputs as opinion work product
* Why Harvey's architecture makes it suitable for confidential client material when Claude's public tiers do not
* How to build privilege defensibility into your AI workflow: mandatory human review, output labeling, and policy documentation
* Matt Lafferman's framework for ensuring AI outputs qualify as opinion work product rather than discoverable fact work product
* Ron's "record everything" hot take — and Matt's push back on where that logic breaks down in sensitive matters
* How in-house counsel faces a unique AI challenge because business and legal functions blur, and only the legal portions are privileged
* Automating law firm intake: what tools like Clio, MyCase, and PracticePanther are building, and what Dentons is already doing
We also discuss:
* How Dentons uses Harvey as a document vault, including running tiered relevancy scoring on large document sets
* The README file as the next frontier: why tech-sector in-house counsel may need to rethink document formats entirely
* Ken Griffin's reversal on AI — from calling it "garbage" in January to expressing alarm at what agentic AI is doing to PhD-level work
* Whether AI saves time or elevates work product quality — Ron and Matt respectfully disagree
* The challenge AI poses for junior associate development and entering the legal market right now
* The FSJ closing segment: Flintstones, Simpsons, and Jetsons advice from a Big Law AI task force member
> Download: Notice of Intent to Use AI in Discovery Helps lawyers disclose AI use in litigation in a structured, defensible way. Covers:
> * When and how to disclose AI use to opposing counsel
> * Language for protective orders that includes AI tools in the definition of authorized agents
> * How to frame AI outputs as generated at the direction of counsel
> * Adaptable to different jurisdictions and risk profiles
Key Takeaway
Availability is not authority — and that principle extends to tool tiers. Using an AI tool that collects your prompts, trains on your outputs, and discloses data to third parties isn't just a privacy concern. It's a privilege waiver waiting to happen. Matt Lafferman's framework is straightforward: choose the right tool, mandate human review, mark everything as work product, and document your policy so you can show a court exactly how your AI workflow maintains privilege at every step.
For Flintstones lawyers, this episode is a fire alarm — the risks are real and courts are already ruling on them. For Simpsons lawyers using Claude Pro or a free tier for anything client-adjacent, this is the moment to audit your setup. Jetsons lawyers building custom agents should be baking these privilege protections into their workflow architecture from day one, not retrofitting them after a discovery dispute.
Mentioned in This Episode
* Matt Lafferman, Partner, Dentons (white collar, government investigations, crypto/blockchain, AI task force) [https://www.dentons.com/en/matthew-lafferman]
* Harvey (enterprise AI platform for legal)
* Claude (Anthropic) — Pro tier vs. Enterprise tier distinction
* Microsoft Copilot
* Clio
* MyCase
* PracticePanther
* U.S. v. Heppner — Claude Pro tier, privilege, and work product
* Trembly v. OpenAI, 2024 U.S. Dist. Lexis 141362 — AI outputs as opinion work product
* Ken Griffin / Citadel — remarks at Stanford Business School on agentic AI
* Judge Rakoff, Southern District of New York
* Rule 26(f) AI Discovery Protocol Addendum
* Notice of Intent to Use AI in Discovery
* README / .md files as emerging document format for in-house counsel
* WhatsApp communications in crypto litigation
* Daubert motions
* Ron's "record everything" CLE hot take
> info@drescherlaw.com [info@drescherlaw.com]