Apparently even lawyers see AI as
a useful tool.
https://www.bespacific.com/ai-native-firms-are-luring-frustrated-lawyers-away-from-big-law/
AI-Native
Firms Are Luring Frustrated Lawyers Away From Big Law
BloombergLaw
[no
paywall ]:
“AI-native firms may not be taking Big Law’s market share, but
they are making incursions into a valuable asset: talent. “The
AI-forward attorneys are chafing at the slow pace of firm adoption
and archaic thinking,” said Sam Shaddox, 38, a co-founder of
Seattle’s Talairis Law Group. “They’re migrating
to the firms that are leading the way on AI,
or leaving Big Law entirely to chart their own path.” Shaddox and
Matt Souza met at the University of Washington School of Law, cut
their teeth at Perkins Coie, and spent years inside legal departments
of Seattle-area tech companies. In May, they launched Talairis Law
Group to advise startups with the help of AI agents. The number of
law firms branded as “AI-native” or “AI-powered” is growing
quickly,
backed by millions in venture capital. Many of their leaders left
major law firms early in their careers to launch businesses aimed at
young companies and entrepreneurs. Logan Brown, a 30-year-old
Harvard graduate and former Cooley LLP associate, officially launched
Soxton AI in New York in December. JP Mohler, 36, was an associate
at WilmerHale and Cooley after Harvard Law School and tinkered with
AI tools at Casetext and Reuters before forming General Legal through
Y Combinator with two co-founders. Some Big Law veterans are also
heeding the call. Norm Law appointed Mike
Schmidtberger, the former Sidley Austin executive committee chair in
January. Moritz, a San Francisco firm whose CEO and co-founder
served as OpenAI counsel, has hired attorneys from Cooley, Goodwin
Procter, and Fenwick & West. General Legal’s 14 full-time
lawyers are almost entirely Big Law alumni. They were recruited in
part because mid-level associates are “frustrated” by a
partnership track that offers little control and years of deferred
reward, Mohler said. All full-time lawyers receive equity in the
company, which provides flat-fee
contract
and employment law services. General Legal has raised $11.5 million
and reached $2 million in annualized revenue, Mohler said. That’s
a speck of what large firms see in revenue each year and less than
one-fifth of what the average Kirkland & Ellis partner earns in
annual profits. Still, Mohler has lofty goals. “Ten years, it
will be the biggest law firm in the world,” he said. Change will
unfold “a lot faster than any previous kind of disruptive cycle.”
He says he is aiming for “venture capital scale”—meaning a
company ultimately valued between $10 billion to $100 billion…”
AI-native
law firms like Soxton and Talairis are built around artificial
intelligence from the ground up—every workflow, pricing model, and
staffing decision is designed assuming AI does the first pass of the
work…”
Does AI really
cause population decline?
https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2026/07/14/2003860695
China
can ban AI boyfriends, but cannot make men listen
A man who
listens with empathy, offers emotional support and is available
whenever you need him? Sounds ideal. As Elon Musk’s Grok serves up
pig-tailed, scantily clad anime-girl companions, China’s artificial
intelligence romance boom has found a different audience: women.
That might
explain why Beijing is moving to rein it in. At a time of plunging
marriage and birth rates, China is set to become the first
country to impose comprehensive rules aimed at curbing the harms of
anthropomorphic AI, with a new regulation taking effect next week.
Too logical to
survive?
https://thenextweb.com/news/australia-ai-policy-copyright-energy
Australia
tells AI data centres to put back more power than they take out
Anthony
Albanese has told the AI industry that Australian books, music, and
journalism are not free training data, and that any large data centre
built in the country will have to put more electricity into the grid
than it draws out. Neither of those things is law yet.
… The
energy obligation is the sharpest thing in the speech. Operators of
the next generation of large data centres would be required to
underwrite new power supply, pay their full share of grid connection
so that no costs land on homes or businesses, and put
at least as much energy into the grid as they take out of it.
It’s kind of
a person for AI that can’t be a person.
https://thenextweb.com/news/delaware-aic-ai-agent-legal-entity-sandbox
Delaware
wants to give AI agents their own legal identity
Delaware
wants to give AI agents something no one has offered them before: a
legal identity of their own. The proposed Delaware AIC would let an
autonomous system run a company, sign contracts, and face lawsuits in
its own name, all inside a supervised sandbox.