Terrific topic! This webinar from Lexbe tomorrow – provides a litigator’s guide to GenAI risk, privilege, work product, and litigation strategy!
Tomorrow, Lexbe will host the webinar titled (wait for it!) The Litigator’s Guide to GenAI | Privilege, Risk, and Real World Use Cases at 2pm ET (1pm CT, 11am PT). This 90-minute webinar is designed for litigators, legal departments, and legal professionals who want practical guidance on using AI responsibly and defensibly. Attendees will leave with a clearer understanding of where the biggest risks are, how courts are beginning to analyze AI use, and what steps legal teams should take now to avoid preventable problems. The presentation also stresses that AI issues should be addressed proactively before a discovery dispute arises.
Agenda:
- AI in legal practice and litigation workflows
- Privilege and work product issues involving AI
- Risks of consumer AI tools versus enterprise platforms
- Hallucinated citations, quotes, and legal propositions
- Judicial scrutiny, sanctions, and discovery implications
- Attorney supervision, governance, and internal AI policies
- Best practices and practical takeaways for litigators using AI now
The speaker will be Oliver Roberts, Founder of Wickard and Adjunct Professor of Law, AI & the Law at Case Western Reserve University.
Let’s face it: GenAI is already changing litigation, but many legal professionals are using it without clear rules for privilege, work product, verification, and disclosure. Courts are starting to confront these issues now, and the risks are real. The presentation highlights privilege concerns with consumer AI tools, growing scrutiny around AI-generated legal work, and reported cases involving hallucinated citations and sanctions. Register here for a litigator’s guide to GenAI tomorrow! If you can’t make it live, register anyway to view it on-demand later!
So, what do you think? Are you interested in a litigator’s guide to GenAI? If so, consider attending the webinar! And please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.
Disclosure: Lexbe is an Educational Partner and sponsor of eDiscovery Today
Disclaimer: The views represented herein are exclusively the views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views held by my employer, my partners or my clients. eDiscovery Today is made available solely for educational purposes to provide general information about general eDiscovery principles and not to provide specific legal advice applicable to any particular circumstance. eDiscovery Today should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a lawyer you have retained and who has agreed to represent you.
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