I'm not surprised at all. I just joined a company that has a similar product, and everyone we demo it for is amazed at how accurate and quick it is. AI and law is a huge untapped market that's just starting to get explored.
Consider - law language is very frequently very similar, to the point where that's where the phrase "boilerplate" was adopted from for coding. Is it that surprising that AI would be very, very applicable to this kind of problem?
Consider - law language is very frequently very similar, to the point where that's where the phrase "boilerplate" was adopted from for coding. Is it that surprising that AI would be very, very applicable to this kind of problem?