Can’t wait for next week: our team is heading to location where our technology is put to the test—two court cases with (only) AI on our side.
This isn’t just another legal tech demo. It’s the real-world application of AI-driven case preparation, testing whether AI autonomy can match human lawyers. For years, we’ve built a system for drafting legal documents, but humans always had the final say. And to be frank, they often made changes or rejected drafts altogether.
we think, legal AI is often dismissed as a inferior supporting tool—limited to document review or simple contract generation. We believe AI-assisted legal work is ready for more complex challenges, and these cases will prove it.
In cases like this: playbooks
Our system prepared this case from scratch, using AI-powered automation to analyze legal arguments and refine strategies through an innovation we call playbooks.
These will be the first two cases where the AI-generated drafts were filed in court without any human objections or modifications. If they stand the test next week, the outcome won’t just validate AI’s capabilities in law—it could reshape the way legal work is done.
Our team will move to location on Monday to meet with our local partnering lawyers and attend the hearings.
But this is bigger than just winning a case. It’s about proving that AI can handle high-stakes legal work at a professional level. A successful outcome could mark a turning point, accelerating AI adoption in law firms, corporations, and legal institutions.
A paradigm shift?
Imagine AI-powered automation could handle 80% of case preparation, freeing lawyers to focus on high-level strategy and client advocacy?
What if AI-driven legal support could democratize access to justice by reducing costs and complexity?
Creating the first playbook took a team of four about six months, and we could easily spend another six refining and A/B testing. But if things go as expected, the next playbook could be up and running in six weeks— and there is no reason, why it shouldn’t be down to six hours before long.
Next week isn’t just another test. It’s a glimpse into the future of legal AI.