Legal teams are excited over the ease AI brings to contract drafting. AI significantly expedites the drafting process, enabling legal teams to close deals faster. Here’s all you need to know.
Gen AI Key Decisions and Trends in 2025
By Justin Donoho Duane Morris Takeaway: Available now is the recent article in the Legal Intelligencer by Justin Donoho entitled “Gen AI Class Action Key Decisions and Trends in 2025.” The article is available here and is a must-read for corporate counsel involved with gen AI technologies. This year has been a busy one in the generative artificial…
Guest Post: Poison Pill
Sarah Abrams
In the coroporate law context, a “poison pill” — formally known as a shareholder rights plan — is a corporate defense strategy used to deter hostile takeover attempts. But what if the poison pill is designed to entrench incumbent senior company management rather than to deter unwanted takeover suitors? In the following guest post, Sarah Abrams, Head of Claims Baleen Specialty, a division of Bowhead Specialty, examines this question and considers the D&O insurance underwriting implications. My thanks to Sarah for allowing me to publish her article as a guest post on this site. Here is Sarah’s article.
Dennis Kennedy Uses AI to Lead the Way in Access to Justice
There’s lots of big talk about the best approach to improving access to justice for self-represented litigants. Dennis Kennedy is not big on theory and bloviation. His most recent article on this topic is available for free republishing in favor of cheap, practical, and effective approaches.
Dennis ran several prompts below through Gemini, with good…
North Carolina and Utah AGs Launch AI Task Force
On November 13, North Carolina Attorney General (AG) Jeff Jackson and Utah AG Derek Brown, along with the Attorney General Alliance, announced a task force in conjunction with generative artificial intelligence (AI) developers, including OpenAI and Microsoft, to identify and develop consumer safeguards within AI systems as these technologies continue to rapidly proliferate.
7 Practical Tips to Implement AI in Your Legal Practice: Artificial Intelligence Best Practices
This excerpt from AI for the Rest of Us from Nextpoint and Tom O’Connor shares 7 practical tips to implement AI in your legal practice! Check it out!
The post 7 Practical Tips to Implement AI in Your Legal Practice: Artificial Intelligence Best Practices appeared first on eDiscovery Today by Doug Austin.
The Automation Architect: Dorna Moini
Hey there Legal Rebels! 👋 I’m excited to share with you the 46th episode of the 2025 season of the LawDroid Manifesto podcast, where I will be continuing to interview key legal innovators to learn how they do what they do. I think you’re going to enjoy this one!If you want to understand how to…
Pursuing Copyright Clarity Amidst the Gen AI Creativity Revolution
Introduction
A collision is on the horizon. The collision is between a strict interpretation of the human authorship requirement under U.S. copyright law, and the ascendence of generative artificial intelligence (Gen AI) as an essential element of modern creativity. From publishing and advertising to music, film, media, and software development, AI systems are reshaping workflows and…
The Law Bytes Podcast, Episode 251: Jennifer Pybus on the Debate Over Canadian Digital Sovereignty
Digital sovereignty is hot the digital policy phrase of the moment driving discussion on Canadian digital policy involving AI, digital infrastructure, privacy, and cultural policy among others. Yet despite its widespread use, its meaning remains opaque as it often used to frame – or reframe – longstanding policy positions. The government has begun to flesh out…
The Last Ten Percent, Visual Evidence, and Supervised Agents with Jiyun Hyo of Givance
This week we welcome Jiyun Hyo, co-founder and CEO of Givance, for a conversation about moving legal AI past shiny summaries toward verified work product. Jiyun’s path runs from Duke robotics, where layered agents watched other agents, to clinical mental health bots, where confident errors carry human cost. Those lessons shape his view of legal tools today: foundation models often answer like students guessing on a pop quiz, sounding sure while drifting from fact.
A key idea is the “last ten percent gap.” Many systems reach outputs that look right on first pass yet slip on a few crucial details. In low-stakes tasks, small misses are a nuisance. In litigation, one missing email or one misplaced time stamp risks ruining trust and admissibility. Jiyun adds a second problem: when users ask for a tiny correction, models tend to rebuild the whole output, so precision edits become a loop of fixes and new breakage.
Givance aims at that gap through text-to-visual evidence work. The platform turns piles of documents into interactive charts with links back to source files. Examples include Gantt charts for personnel histories, Sankey diagrams for asset flows, overlap views for evidence exchanges, and timelines that surface contradictions across thousands of records. Jiyun shares early law-firm use: rapid fact digestion after a data dump, clearer client conversations around case theory, and courtroom visuals that help judges and juries follow a sequence without sketching their own shaky diagrams.
Safety, supervision, and security follow naturally. Drawing on robotics, Jiyun argues for a live supervisory layer during agentic workflows so alerts surface while negotiations or analyses unfold rather than days later. Too many alerts, though, create noise, so tuning confidence thresholds becomes part of product design. On security, Givance works in isolated environments, strips identifiers before model calls, and keeps architecture model-agnostic so newer systems slot in without reopening privacy debates.
The episode ends on market dynamics and the near future. Jiyun sees mega-funded text-first platforms as market openers, normalizing AI buying and leaving room for second-wave multimodal tools. Asked whether the search bar in document review fades away, he expects search to stick around for a long while because lawyers associate a search box with control, even if chat interfaces improve. The bigger shift, in his view, lies in outputs, more interactive visuals that help legal teams spot gaps, test case stories, and present evidence with clarity.
Listen on mobile platforms: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube
[Special Thanks to Legal Technology Hub for their sponsoring this episode.]
Email: geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com
Music: Jerry David DeCicca
Transcript: