As clients and lawyers increasingly turn to generative AI tools to enhance legal work, an important question arises: under what circumstances might the resulting materials remain protected, or lose ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is everywhere. Lawyers now use it with increasing regularity, and so do staff, colleagues, and clients.
Clients often want a trusted family member by their side when they consult with attorneys. While understandable, doing so can carry serious risks. Under New York law, the general rule is the presence ...
BOSTON — Lawyers across the country are assessing the ramifications of a federal judge’s ruling that a white-collar criminal defendant waived the attorney-client privilege to — and lacked work-product ...
A flat-bladed screwdriver can hew away strips of wood. But any woodworker knows a chisel would be the preferred tool for shaving and shaping the wood. Forcing a tool to perform another task not only ...
The recent United States v. Heppner case highlights that inputs and outputs from public AI tools are not automatically confidential and may not be protected by attorney-client privilege or work ...
Business leaders should be aware of the AI environment, its internal use of received data and privacy policy agreements ...
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) — A new federal ruling is raising questions about how artificial intelligence could impact the legal system. A judge in the United States District Court for the Southern District ...
Q: We are in a civil case with others, suing a person who engaged in fraudulent misconduct. We share the same attorney who is trying to establish that the attorney-client privilege between this guy ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results