By Christopher Niesche | August 11, 2021
The platform allows teams to manage all their matters—contracts, documents, e-billing, outsourced work and reporting—from one cloud-based platform, with a growing number of additional tools provided by other legal tech companies.
By Victoria Hudgins | August 6, 2021
South Africa and Australia have signaled they will stray from the U.S. and other top patent filing countries' definition of an inventor. But such divergence could endanger patent standardizations and treaty agreements.
By Victoria Hudgins | August 4, 2021
As more law schools are hiring online program management (OPM) companies to help launch remote and hybrid courses, questions remain around the transparency and fairness of these financial arrangements.
By Zach Warren | July 27, 2021
Legalweek and Law.com are seeking nominations from lawyers, legal technologists and legal operations professionals who have handled cutting edge matters at the intersection of the law and technology.
By Zach Warren | July 15, 2021
Frontline, which recently rebranded from Intelliteach to focus administrative, financial and IT managed services, is bringing in InvoicePrep's outsourced process work and ICRM software capabilities.
By Haley Altman | July 15, 2021
In this monthly series examining how legal tech companies succeed and fail at encouraging tech adoption, Haley Altman examines two platforms: small claims filing assistant People Clerk and contract managing app Quiktract.
By Tom McParland | July 7, 2021
The lawsuits, filed Tuesday in Manhattan and Los Angeles federal court, came just one week after the company raised more than $4 billion in its U.S. IPO.
By Victoria Hudgins | July 2, 2021
Microsoft is ceasing support of Windows 10 in 2025. The beta version of its replacement—Windows 11—is currently available, but IT providers say it's worth easing into the new system for both infrastructure and budget reasons.
By Alaina Lancaster | July 1, 2021
U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers found that privacy allegations against Microsoft brought by members of the California legal community are "far too sparse and conclusory to make the claim of personal injury plausible."
By Andrew Goudsward | June 30, 2021
Witnesses at a House judiciary hearing said the Justice Department is routinely using gag orders like the ones that prevented lawmakers and journalists from finding out their data had been subpoenaed during the Trump administration.
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