AI is rapidly reshaping the legal landscape. This Veracity Forensics webinar on April 1st will put AI on trial in terms of real-world implications on litigation!
The post AI on Trial: Breakthroughs, Efficiencies, and Ethical Challenges: AI Webinars appeared first on eDiscovery Today by Doug Austin.
Guest Post: The New Physics of Legal Tech: Who Performs Legal Work in the AI Era? (Part 3 of 3)
This is the final installment in a three-part series examining the forces reshaping the legal industry. Part One and Part Two covered the macro dynamics of the AI industrial revolution and also the bending of UPL as consumers turn to AI products such as ChatGPT, Claude and Perplexity for legal advice. Consumer behavior will lead,…
Intel Derivative Suit Tests Governance Implications of Government Equity Stakes
During my panel, “Shifting Ground: D&O in a Changing World,” at the Professional Underwriting Liability Society (PLUS)’s annual D&O Symposium, I noted the potential for emerging risks stemming from the U.S. government’s recent role as a shareholder in publicly traded companies, including Intel Corp. (Intel).
On March 5, 2026, an Intel investor filed his Verified Stockholder Derivative Complaint in Delaware Court of Chancery against, among others, Intel’s CEO Lip-Bu Tan and U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick (Intel Derivative). Certain exhibits to the Intel Derivative were initially made public, with the lawsuit unsealed days later. The following discusses the Intel Derivative and potential corporate governance challenges that increased government equity ownership may raise for U.S. companies.
States, AI, and Workforce Competitiveness: Rewiring the American Dream
The dawn of the AI era isn’t just a technological shift; it is a profound economic and social disruption that requires a fundamental “rewiring” of the American workforce. At the recent SCSP AI+Education conference in Washington, D.C., a compelling panel titled “States, AI, and Workforce Competitiveness” brought together former Governors Eric Holcomb (Indiana) and Gina…
Order is “Clearly Erroneous” or “Contrary to Law”, Rules Court in OpenAI Case: eDiscovery Case Law
In the case In re OpenAI, Inc. Copyright Infringement Litig., regarding Magistrate Judge Ona T. Wang’s November 24, 2025 discovery order determining that OpenAI waived the attorney-client privilege with respect to communications in 2022, New York District Judge Sidney H. Stein stated that he “concludes pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(a) that the…
From Edge to Orbit: Commercial and Government Momentum for Space-Based AI Processing
North Korean Threat Groups Using AI in Remote Technical Employee Schemes
Microsoft Threat Intelligence issued a report on March 6, 2026, entitled, “AI as tradecraft: How threat actors operationalize AI,” which outlines how threat actors, including those from North Korea, are “operationalizing AI along the cyberattack lifecycle…to bypass safeguards and perform malicious activity.” The threat actors are adopting AI “as operational enablers, embedding AI…
YouTube adds a tool to detect fake videos!
The NewYorkTimes.com reported that the “Social media companies are under pressure to crack down on so-called deepfake videos that use deceptive images of real people.” The March 10, 2026 article entitled ” YouTube Adds Tool to Help Public Figures Report Fake Videos” (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/10/technology/youtube-deepfakes-detection-tool.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share) includes comments from Reporter Natallie Rocha:
YouTube is adding…
Today’s podcast episode: Agentic AI in Consumer Financial Services: Opportunities, Risks, and Emerging Legal Frameworks
Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming the consumer financial services industry. From underwriting and fraud detection to customer engagement and collections, financial institutions are increasingly deploying advanced AI tools to automate processes, personalize services, and improve operational efficiency. We are releasing today, on our Consumer Finance Monitor Podcast show, a discussion of what may be the…
Don’t Panic! How Federal Contractors Should Navigate the Anthropic Designation
In every crisis, half the room runs in circles while the other half picks up a clipboard and starts taking stock. The Anthropic-Pentagon dispute is that crisis, and defense contractors are deciding which half they want to be in.
The short version: The government designated a FedRAMP-authorized, facility-cleared American AI company a national security supply chain threat, via social media, after the company refused to remove safety restrictions on autonomous weapons and mass surveillance. Anthropic sued days later, with the Pentagon’s own officials on the record stating the designation was “ideologically driven” with “no evidence of supply chain risk.”
