by HolAdmin | Feb 19, 2026 | American Legal News
I am not breaking news to anyone by pointing out that Donald Trump consistently disparages information that he thinks makes him look bad. Meanwhile, any data that he thinks casts him in a positive light is inevitably the greatest, the best, the most accurate data...
by HolAdmin | Feb 19, 2026 | American Legal News
With a Biglaw firm officially blaming staff layoffs on AI, what is it going to look like if and when layoffs come for lawyers? It’s unlikely to look the same for every Biglaw business model. And it could look even more different for boutiques. Embattled Goldman Sachs...
by HolAdmin | Feb 19, 2026 | American Legal News
Once upon a time, there were two classes of lawyers in law firms: partners and associates. The associates typically came straight out of law schools, worked for 5-7 years under the tutelage of the partners, and then most of them became partners. The ones who didn’t...
by HolAdmin | Feb 19, 2026 | American Legal News
If you were looking for a case study in how not to run a criminal investigation, congratulations: the Trump-era Department of Justice has prepared one for you, complete with a grand jury no-bill and prosecutors who apparently could not identify a single statute their...
by HolAdmin | Feb 19, 2026 | American Legal News
It sometimes feels as though the legal profession’s primary engagement with AI so far involves lawyers citing fake cases generated by ChatGPT and getting hauled before judges to explain themselves. And with global legal hallucination incidents closing in on 1000...
by HolAdmin | Feb 19, 2026 | American Legal News
Most contracts are written for a world that pauses. A human decides. A system acts. If something changes, someone notices, and the contract responds. That rhythm is baked into representations, notice provisions, audit rights, and remediation clauses. AI is quietly...