Legal technology, also known as Legal Tech, refers to the use of technology and software to provide legal services and support to the legal industry. Legal Tech also includes certain technological advancements, such as Blockchain and Artificial Intelligence. These are being identified as technologies that many experts predict will disrupt the legal profession in an unprecedented way. A recent article published in Forbes magazine, titled “The Future of Lawyers: Legal Tech, AI, Big Data and Online Courts”, discusses whether in the future a law firm could be charged with legal malpractice if it did not use artificial intelligence. It certainly is conceivable. According to the Forbes article, “Today, artificial intelligence offers a solution to the access-to-justice issue that will completely transform our traditional legal system.”
PHILLIPS LYTLE LLP PARTNERS DOUGLAS W DIMITROFF AND LISA L SMITH NAMED TO LAW360 EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARDS
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PHILLIPS LYTLE LLP PARTNERS DOUGLAS W DIMITROFF AND LISA L SMITH NAMED TO LAW360 EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARDS
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By Neil Hodge2021-04-08T20:19:00+01:00
Last weekend, reports surfaced that the personal data of more than 533 million Facebook users had been made publicly available on a hacker forum.
The social media firm responded the data had been stolen and made public from a reported data breach that took place in early 2018. Because the breach predated the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) coming into force, and because according to Facebook no new breach has occurred, the company believes it has no case to answer.
Its lead European data supervisory authority, the Irish Data Protection Commission, however, has sent Facebook detailed questions to determine what happened given the tremendous amount of data involved, according to Deputy Commissioner Graham Doyle.