“The universe of law is expanding at an ever-increasing rate,” he said. “Regulation is not going to decrease - what industry isn’t regulated? With that comes increased compliance and increased investigation. This technology offers the opportunity to get your arms around things you otherwise wouldn’t get your arms around, such as getting a better risk management process in place. Generative AI is augmenting the capabilities of the legal team, not replacing them and not automating things, but being a very powerful tool to get stuff done that wouldn’t otherwise be achievable.”
“For in-house legal teams we often talk about a polycrisis or a permacrisis where the sheer range of issues being dealt with means they don’t have the bandwidth to deal with it all. You put stuff away that you would love to deal with but you don’t have the time, the resources or the finances to address.
I can see applications for this for projects that you don’t have the time or resource to do, like putting improved risk management processes in place that give you institutional integrity and resilience,” said Morrison.
AI before GPT
AI systems can already do a lot in the legal field, such as predict trial outcomes and judges’ rulings extremely accurately. According to Lucy Shurwood of Pinsent Masons, who’s been working on using technology to deliver legal services for over a decade, systems can now extract precise information from contracts quickly and easily.
“It is making it easier to extract the relevant information from a contract so that it can be reviewed and evaluated. This works for anything to do with contractual terms. The key terms that a client might be interested are ‘when can I terminate the agreement?’; ‘what's the governing law of the agreement?’; ‘if I want to transfer the contract, can I do that? Are there any conditions?’. It generally arises in an M&A transaction or is driven by regulatory change that a company has to comply with. That’s when they need to understand what the contractual position is in a very large number of contracts. So it's about being able to extract information really efficiently and support decision making,” she said.
Know your terms
All the different names used for AI can be confusing. Here’s a quick guide: