Mon.Oct 23, 2023

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After Referrals, It’s Recon Time: How Small Business Clients Scout Lawyers

Attorney at Work

Katie Barnard | Your messaging is on point … but what if the medium fails the audience? Tips for effectively delivering information to all. The post After Referrals, It’s Recon Time: How Small Business Clients Scout Lawyers appeared first on Attorney at Work.

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October 2023 Feature Release

Lawmatics

Lawmatics is all treat and no trick when it comes to our brand new features, including appointment time zone selections, company matter add-ons, and much more. So grab a pumpkin spice latte and hunker down for this fresh new batch of features. Simple scheduling for different time zones Does your firm operate in multiple areas or with remote staff? We've simplified appointment and event coordination for you by introducing a new Time Zone field.

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How AI and Automation Are Changing Court Reporting – and How to Adapt

The Cloud Court Blog

If you’re worried about substitute service providers and existing companies breaking into your livelihood, read on. Stop asking whether AI will take your job. It can’t, not with inherent physical and technical limitations and the high costs to train LLMs. Instead, ask how soon could someoneuse AI to augment their capabilities and take your job. Understand how you differentiate yourself (or not) from services that are trying to whittle away your customer base.

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This Week in Washington IP: Spurring Green Growth, Learning the Fundamentals of the Patent Application Process, and a Critical Look at Domestic Technology Innovation

IP Watchdog

This week in Washington IP news, a House subcommittee holds a hearing on advances in deepfake technology. Elsewhere, the Peterson Institute hosts the launch of an OECD report that looks at how governments can spur growth in the green economy, and the USPTO holds a three-day event for newcomers to the patent application process.

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Trial Prep: What Attorneys Really Want (And How to Deliver It)

Speaker: Joe Stephens, J.D., Attorney and Law Professor

Get ready to uncover what attorneys really need from you when it comes to trial prep in this new webinar! Attorney and law professor, Joe Stephens, J.D., will share proven techniques for anticipating attorney needs, organizing critical documents, and transforming complex information into compelling case presentations. Key Learning Objectives: Organization That Makes Sense 🎯 Learn how to structure and organize case materials in ways that align with how attorneys actually work and think.

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Colin Levy, Dorna Moini, and Ashley Carlisle on Herding Cats and Heralding Change: The Inside Scoop on the “Handbook of Legal Tech”

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

This week on The Geek in Review podcast Marlene Gebauer and Greg Lambert featured guests Colin Levy , Ashley Carlisle , and Dorna Moini discussing Levy’s recently published book “ Handbook of Legal Tech.” Levy edited the book and contributors included Moini, Carlisle’s CEO, Tony Thai, and many more legal technology experts. The book provides an overview of key technologies transforming the legal industry like automation, AI, blockchain, document automation, CLM, and more.

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Air Mattress Patent Deflated by CAFC

IP Watchdog

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) issued two opinions today on appeals from a total of six inter partes review (IPR) decisions, affirming two of the decisions and dismissing the remaining four as moot. In the first decision, the CAFC affirmed the Patent Trial and Appeal Board’s (PTAB’s) finding in IPR2018-00874 that certain claims of Team Worldwide Corporation’s U.S.

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Copyright Office Section 1201 NPRM Includes Petitions for New Exemptions on Generative AI Bias Research, Right to Repair

IP Watchdog

Last week, the U.S. Copyright Office issued a notice of proposed rulemaking (NRPM) in the Federal Register as part of the triennial rulemaking process for exceptions to 17 U.S.C. § 1201’s prohibition against circumventing technological protection measures (TPMs) controlling digital access to copyrighted works. This proceeding is the ninth triennial Section 1201 rulemaking since passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) in 1998, and it starts with the Copyright Office intending to re

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Crisis Management at Law Firms: How to Handle High-Stakes Situations

CaseFox

You never know when your law firm can meet with an unexpected crisis. No matter what the size of your law firm, it is always vulnerable to a crisis. Crisis can take many forms in a law firm. It can disrupt your firm’s reputation, threaten your firm’s position in the industry, or do other such things.Regardless of the type of crisis your company may encounter, it’s essential to maintain a strong crisis management plan at all times.

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The Tax Burden on Innovation Just Got Much Heavier and Not Many People Are Talking About It

IP Watchdog

I was not even aware of the issue below until a CPA friend of mine happened to mention it during a friendly telephone call. But unless Section 174 of the Internal Revenue Code is restored to its previous state from prior to the 2017 Trump tax cuts, U.S. innovation will be greatly impacted. Section 174 of the Internal Revenue Code has been around since 1954.