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Welcome to AI Lawyer Talking Tech. In this episode, we examine the significant transformation underway in the legal profession driven by artificial intelligence. From boosting efficiency in tasks like document drafting and research for smaller firms to presenting new challenges related to accuracy and ethics, AI is reshaping how legal work is done. We'll discuss the strategic shift AI enables, allowing lawyers to focus on higher-value client interactions, and the critical need for careful planning and integration as firms adopt these tools. Stay tuned as we explore this evolving technology and its implications for the future of law.Unlock efficiency: How GenAI helps smaller law firms thrive in a competitive legal landscape07 May 2025Legal.ThomsonReuters.comApple Eyes Adding AI Search to Replace Google, Ending Tech Giant Partnership07 May 2025PYMNTS.comResearchers Influenced Reddit Users With AI Bots. Now They Face Legal Action.07 May 2025MovieguideOn LawNext: Navigating ‘Unruliness': Hence Cofounder Sean West on How Politics, AI and Law are Rewriting Business Rules07 May 2025LawSitesThe Siren's Song of Generative AI in Pleadings07 May 2025JD SupraILTA Evolve: Fitting GenAI into your current systems can be difficult, but not impossible07 May 2025Thomson ReutersTraveling Internationally? What to Know About Airport Phone Searches at the US Border07 May 2025KQEDPatented: ‘Energy Efficient Legged Mobile Robot' and More North Texas Inventive Activity07 May 2025Dallas InnovatesWhy Accuracy—and Humans—Still Matter in Legal Marketing and the Legal Profession07 May 2025WebWire | Recent HeadlinesUK marketing leads AI adoption, legal sector hesitant Today07 May 2025IT Brief UKNavigating Diminished Value Claims07 May 2025Lawyer MonthlyBridging the Gap Between Litigation and Science07 May 2025TechPolicy.pressPerplexed about AI? Richard Susskind wants to help07 May 2025ABA JournalPlanning Your AI Policy? Start Here.07 May 2025Corporate Compliance InsightsActionstep celebrates record UK growth as midsize law firms embrace cloud-first innovation07 May 2025Legal FuturesThe Evolution Of In-House Counsel In An AI-Driven World07 May 2025Forbes.comFree AI Is All You Need to Supercharge Your Practice07 May 2025SlawRegistration is open for SBM's Great Lakes Legal Conference in June07 May 2025LegalNews.comThe Biggest News at CLOC May Be This No-Show07 May 2025Zach Abramowitz is Legally DisruptedWhat Happens When a Law Firm Starts Using Draftlex07 May 2025Legaltech on MediumILTA Evolve: Fitting GenAI into your current systems can be difficult, but not impossible07 May 2025Thomson Reuters InstituteAI for Legal Professionals: The Future Is Already Here07 May 2025Legaltech on MediumFTC Finalizes COPPA Rule Changes, New Rule Takes Effect in June07 May 2025Venable LLPQuit Monkeying Around: FDA Offers Faster Approval Times in Bid to Phase Out Animal Testing07 May 2025McDermott Will and EmeryA view from California: Privacy Agency enforcement, CCPA Rulemaking and CIPA reform07 May 2025Clark HillDay Pitney's William Roberts Recognized on the 2025 Lawdragon 500 Leading Global Cyber Lawyers List07 May 2025Day PitneyEssential Features to Look for in Legal Technology Solutions Legal tech is a powerful ally—but only when it's chosen wisely.06 May 2025Legal ReaderLathrop GPM Launches Sacramento Office Amid Ongoing California Expansion06 May 2025Lathrop GPM
For nearly 30 years, Richard Susskind has written books asking lawyers to envision the future of the law and the legal profession in ways that stretch the imagination. Susskind has been one of the foremost proponents of the transformative potential of technology in legal services. Now, he's asking us to imagine larger transformation still: a world in which AI reigns and humanity faces being sidelined. Susskind was an early and enthusiastic booster of the development of artificial intelligence, he tells the ABA Journal's Lee Rawles in this episode of the Modern Law Library. He first became enamored of its potential as a law student in the 1980s, and wrote his doctorate at the University of Oxford on AI and the law in 1986. But the speed and direction of recent advances have given him pause. Will AI be a tool for humanity, or its destruction? In his new book, How to Think About AI: A Guide for the Perplexed, he hopes to help the layperson navigate the issues raised by artificial intelligence, and provoke a global discussion about the ethical and legal implications. Technology is too important to be left only to the technologists, he says. While most people are able to see the promise of AI for professions other than their own, Susskind sees a phenomenon he calls "not-us thinking" when most people are asked if their own work could be taken over by an AI system. Lawyers should be careful not to overestimate clients' attachment to having a human lawyer if their goal is simply to avoid legal pitfalls and they can rely on an AI system to accomplish that. In this episode, Susskind discusses the promise of AI for increasing access to justice, and talks about some of the ethical decisions that will have to be made with Rawles, who is more of an AI skeptic.
For nearly 30 years, Richard Susskind has written books asking lawyers to envision the future of the law and the legal profession in ways that stretch the imagination. Susskind has been one of the foremost proponents of the transformative potential of technology in legal services. Now, he's asking us to imagine larger transformation still: a world in which AI reigns and humanity faces being sidelined. Susskind was an early and enthusiastic booster of the development of artificial intelligence, he tells the ABA Journal's Lee Rawles in this episode of the Modern Law Library. He first became enamored of its potential as a law student in the 1980s, and wrote his doctorate at the University of Oxford on AI and the law in 1986. But the speed and direction of recent advances have given him pause. Will AI be a tool for humanity, or its destruction? In his new book, How to Think About AI: A Guide for the Perplexed, he hopes to help the layperson navigate the issues raised by artificial intelligence, and provoke a global discussion about the ethical and legal implications. Technology is too important to be left only to the technologists, he says. While most people are able to see the promise of AI for professions other than their own, Susskind sees a phenomenon he calls "not-us thinking" when most people are asked if their own work could be taken over by an AI system. Lawyers should be careful not to overestimate clients' attachment to having a human lawyer if their goal is simply to avoid legal pitfalls and they can rely on an AI system to accomplish that. In this episode, Susskind discusses the promise of AI for increasing access to justice, and talks about some of the ethical decisions that will have to be made with Rawles, who is more of an AI skeptic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For nearly 30 years, Richard Susskind has written books asking lawyers to envision the future of the law and the legal profession in ways that stretch the imagination. Susskind has been one of the foremost proponents of the transformative potential of technology in legal services. Now, he's asking us to imagine larger transformation still: a world in which AI reigns and humanity faces being sidelined. Susskind was an early and enthusiastic booster of the development of artificial intelligence, he tells the ABA Journal's Lee Rawles in this episode of the Modern Law Library. He first became enamored of its potential as a law student in the 1980s, and wrote his doctorate at the University of Oxford on AI and the law in 1986. But the speed and direction of recent advances have given him pause. Will AI be a tool for humanity, or its destruction? In his new book, How to Think About AI: A Guide for the Perplexed, he hopes to help the layperson navigate the issues raised by artificial intelligence, and provoke a global discussion about the ethical and legal implications. Technology is too important to be left only to the technologists, he says. While most people are able to see the promise of AI for professions other than their own, Susskind sees a phenomenon he calls "not-us thinking" when most people are asked if their own work could be taken over by an AI system. Lawyers should be careful not to overestimate clients' attachment to having a human lawyer if their goal is simply to avoid legal pitfalls and they can rely on an AI system to accomplish that. In this episode, Susskind discusses the promise of AI for increasing access to justice, and talks about some of the ethical decisions that will have to be made with Rawles, who is more of an AI skeptic.
This week, we're revisiting a wonderful discussion with Professor Richard Susskind. In the time since he joined us on the podcast, Richard has been promoted to CBE—Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the King's New Year Honours List 2025 for his “services to Information Technology and to the Law.” Richard has also written a new book, How To Think About AI: A Guide For The Perplexed, in which he addresses the most challenging issues of AI technology that are currently being debated—the business, risk, legal, ethical, management, and philosophical implications. The book will be available in March for those in the UK, and in April for those in the US. We have provided a link with additional information in the show notes. Congratulations to Richard on these recent accomplishments. And thank you to everyone for listening. We hope you enjoy! Today, we welcome a very special guest—Professor Richard Susskind. For those who have been engaged in the discussions around legal tech for the past few decades, Richard needs no introduction. He is one of the most advanced thinkers on the impact of technology on the profession, and has been challenging our notions about what it will mean to be a lawyer for a long time. Richard is an adviser, speaker, and author who was focused on legal tech and the future of the profession long before these subjects were top of mind in the industry. In the 1980s, he wrote his doctorate at Oxford University on artificial intelligence, and today, his main area of expertise continues to be the impact of AI and other technologies on the legal profession. Among other roles, Richard is President of the Society for Computers and Law, and Technology Adviser to the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales. He is also an adviser to leading professional firms, in-house legal departments, and governments and judiciaries around the world. He is a frequent speaker at conferences, seminars, retreats, and other events, having been invited to lecture in more than 60 countries. Richard has written 10 books and has contributed more than 150 articles to The Times of London. His most recent publication is the third edition of Tomorrow's Lawyers, which guides legal professionals through the imminent future of law, and calls upon the next generation of lawyers to embrace technology in order to improve current legal and court services. In our conversation, Richard discusses the ways we should all be thinking about legal innovation, the challenges of training lawyers for the future, and the qualifications of those likely to develop breakthrough technologies in law, as well as his own journey and how he became interested in AI as an undergraduate student.
In deze aflevering spreekt Piek met Marlies van Eck, principal consultant bij Hooghiemstra & Partners en gastdocent Radboud Universiteit, over het versimpelen van wetten, de rechtszaak die Stichting Bescherming Privacybelangen aanspant tegen Google (Sluit je hier aan bij de rechtszaak tegen Google!) en over de manieren waarop wet- en regelgeving zich kan en zou moeten verhouden tot technologie. Joeri schuift aan.Meer over MarliesIn deze aflevering komen de volgende namen voorbij:Olympe de Gouges (schrijver, feminist, revolutionaire)Jon Bing (professor in de rechten)Richard Susskind (schrijver, adviseur, spreker)Joseph Weizenbaum (professor, computer scientist)Bernard Hermesdorf (rechts- en cultuurhistoricus, rector Radboud Universiteit tijdens WO II)Marga Groothuis (universitair docent staats- en bestuursrecht)Deze publicaties worden genoemd:From Street-Level to System-Level Bureaucracies: How Information and Communication Technology Is Transforming Administrative Discretion and Constitutional Control – Mark Bovens & Stavros Zouridis (2002)De Informatiecultus – Theodore Roszak (1986)Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks – Yuval Harari (2024)En deze video:Waarom ben jij voor de overheid niets meer dan een nummertje? – Universiteit vanNederland (YouTube, 2018)--------------------Dit gesprek is opgenomen op 1 november 2024.Host: Piek KnijffRedactie: Team Filosofie in actieStudio en montage: De PodcastersTune: Uma van WingerdenArtwork: Hans Bastmeijer – Servion StudioWil je nog ergens over napraten? Dat kan! Neem contact op via info@filosofieinactie.nlMeer weten over Filosofie in actie en onze werkzaamheden? Bezoek dan onze website:www.filosofieinactie.nl, of volg onze LinkedIn-pagina.
The Future of the Professions", written by Richard Susskind
At the Future Lawyer UK Conference, co-host Alma-Constance interviews Richard Susskind on Law, Tech and How It Affects Kids As They Grow Up. In this special interview, questions such as how AI will affect how laws are drafted will be explored!Professor Richard Susskind OBE KC (Hon) is half-lawyer, half-technologist. He has written 10 books and his work has been translated into 18 languages. His eleventh book, How to Think About AI: A Guide to the Perplexed, is to be published in the coming year. With his son, Daniel, he co-authored The Future of the Professions (2015, 2022), which was an FT Book of the Year. He is President of the Society for Computers and Law and, for 25 years, was Technology Adviser to the Lord Chief Justice of England. He wrote his PhD on artificial intelligence and the law at Oxford University in the early 1980s.Keep your questions coming in. Please subscribe, rate, and share the podcast with your friends. See you soon in the next episode!You can follow us @kidslawinfo on LinkedIn, X and Instagram
In this episode, Kate is joined by Professor Richard Susskind OBE KC (Hon) to discuss the future of family law and legal services.About the episodeThis episode is focused on technology, the future of family law and legal services. Richard explains how the landscape has changed and what we, as consumers, can expect for the future. Especially when it comes to AI, alternative dispute resolution delivered remotely and things that haven't even been imagined yet. Meet our guestRichard is the world's most cited author on the future of legal services. He is President of The Society for Computers and Law and he served as Technology Adviser to the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales. His main area of expertise is the future of professional services and the way that AI and other technologies are changing the work of lawyers. He advises leading professional firms, in-house legal departments, and governments and judiciaries around the world. Richard has authored ten books, including The Future of Law and Tomorrow's Lawyers. He has also contributed more than 150 columns to The Times. In 2000, he was made an OBE, and In 2022, the King approved Richard's appointment as an Honorary King's Counsel.
Technology and AI are changing the calculus on which categories of work are assigned to human versus digital agents. Co-hosts James Villarrubia and Dyan Finkhousen connect with Richard Susskind, President of the Society for Computers and Law to discuss his perspective on the history of AI and how it's informing potential futures for all professions. Guest: Richard Susskind, President, Society for Computers and Law Co-Hosts: James Villarrubia, White House Presidential Innovation Fellow & Digital Strategist for CAS, NASA Dyan Finkhousen, Founder & CEO, Shoshin Works
Artificial intelligence (AI) can streamline processes, improve efficiency, and provide valuable insights. Zooming in on its impact on the legal industry, AI has already proven to excel at tasks such as legal research, document analysis, and contract review. This is enabling lawyers to handle large volumes of data more quickly and accurately than ever before. However, some of the legal profession fear how AI will impact their jobs. And that fear isn't unfounded. Goldman Sachs estimated in a 2023 report that 44 percent of current work tasks in the legal field could be automated. What does AI hold for the legal practice? Is it the threat that we most commonly hear about—Are we all going to be replaced by machines? Or is it an opportunity to evolve? Or maybe both? In short, is AI the revolution that many talk about for the legal world, and how can we prepare for it?Our guest today is no less than Richard Susskind. Mr. Susskind is a renowned expert and visionary in the field of law and technology. With a career spanning several decades, he has made significant contributions to our understanding of how AI is transforming the legal profession. Mr. Susskind is not only a prolific author but also a sought-after speaker and consultant, advising governments, law firms, and legal organizations on how to adapt in the Digital Age.His work has been translated into 18 languages, and he has been invited to speak in over 60 countries. He has written 10 books including The Future of Law, Tomorrow's Lawyers, and, with three editions, The Future of the Professions with Daniel Susskind, with the last edition was published in 2022. He has also published two editions of an online course titled, “The Future of Justice.” He has also contributed more than 150 columns to The Times. In 2000, he was appointed an office of the Order of the British Empire by Her Majesty, the Queen. In 2022, it was announced that His Majesty the King, had approved Mr. Susskind appointment as an Honorary King's counsel. Brand & New is a production of the International Trademark AssociationHosted by Audrey Dauvet - Contribution of M. Halle & S. Lagedamond - Music by JD BeatsFOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT INTA.ORGTo go further: https://www.linkedin.com/in/richardsusskind/?originalSubdomain=ukAlso of interest:Richard Susskind's official websiteBeware of "Technological Myopia," Richard Susskind Says About GPT-3.5 (law.com, February 2023)How will leveraging AI change the future of legal services? (Reuters, August 2023)India: The Artificial Intelligence Revolution and Its Intellectual Property Implications (Brand & New, June 2022)Artificial Intelligence Threatens Trademark's Gatekeeper Role (INTA Bulletin, February 2022)Artificial Intelligence and Legal Research in the 21st Century (INTA Bulletin, December 2020)The IPO of the Future—Think Tank Report & Checklist (INTA, November 2022)
Technological advancements and access to information are reshaping the role of veterinarians today. This week, Shawn and Ivan talk to Dr. Rob Trimble of Harbor.vet and Veterinary Entrepreneurship Academy about transforming veterinary student education and the future of practice ownership. Learn more about Dr. Rob at harbor.vet. Dr. Trimble recommends The Future of the Professions by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind.
Atakuje nas zewsząd sztuczna inteligencja. Nie wiem czy czujecie się atakowani, my prawnicy zaczęliśmy się tak czuć, przynajmniej niektórzy, już wiele lat temu. Richard Susskind w 2010 r. wydał książkę „Koniec świata prawników” i właśnie straszył nas sztuczną inteligencją. Czy mu się to udało? Raczej nie. Ale niedawno prof. Andrzej Dragan, fizyk kwantowy, powiedział że sztuczna inteligencja nas zniszczy – mówi Robert Gwiazdowski w najnowszym odcinku podcastu video „Gwiazdowski mówi Interii”.
To celebrate the two-year anniversary of Pioneers and Pathfinders, we welcome a very special guest—Professor Richard Susskind OBE. For those who have been engaged in the discussions around legal tech for the past few decades, Richard needs no introduction. He is one of the most advanced thinkers on the impact of technology on the profession, and has been challenging our notions about what it will mean to be a lawyer for a long time. Richard is an adviser, speaker, and author who was focused on legal tech and the future of the profession long before these subjects were top of mind in the industry. In the 1980s, he wrote his doctorate at Oxford University on artificial intelligence, and today, his main area of expertise continues to be the impact of AI and other technologies on the legal profession. Among other roles, Richard is President of the Society for Computers and Law, and Technology Adviser to the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales. He is also an adviser to leading professional firms, in-house legal departments, and governments and judiciaries around the world. He is a frequent speaker at conferences, seminars, retreats, and other events, having been invited to lecture in more than 60 countries. Richard has written 10 books and has contributed more than 150 articles to The Times of London. His most recent publication is the third edition of Tomorrow's Lawyers, which guides legal professionals through the imminent future of law, and calls upon the next generation of lawyers to embrace technology in order to improve current legal and court services. In our conversation, Richard discusses the ways we should all be thinking about legal innovation, the challenges of training lawyers for the future, and the qualifications of those likely to develop breakthrough technologies in law, as well as his own journey and how he became interested in AI as an undergraduate student.
What will the economy of the future look like? How can we prepare for it? What impact is technology having on work and the job market? Are we heading towards a world without work? To answer these questions, Pedro Pinto interviews Daniel Susskind in this episode of “It's Not That Simple”, a podcast by the Francisco Manuel dos Santos Foundation. An expert on the impact of technology, particularly artificial intelligence, on work and society, Daniel Susskind is a Research Professor of Economics at King's College London, and a Senior Research Associate at the Institute for Ethics in AI at Oxford University. He is the the author of the book A World Without Work, described by The New York Times as "required reading for any potential presidential candidate thinking about the economy of the future”, co-author of the best-selling book, The Future of the Professions. His TED Talk, on the future of work, has been viewed more than 1.6 million times. Previously, Susskind worked in the British Government – as a policy adviser in the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit, as a policy analyst in the Policy Unit in 10 Downing Street, and as a senior policy adviser in the Cabinet Office. He was a Kennedy Scholar at Harvard University. In this episode, Susskind discusses how the Covid-19 pandemic accelerated the role of technology in the various kinds of work we do. He looks at how technological progress will impact the lives of people who depend on paid work for their income, and considers how many people could be displaced or left behind by the economy of the future. He also examines how a world with less work available to a larger number of people will affect them emotionally and not just financially. Finally, Susskind discusses what kinds of jobs and careers will be open to future generations, and what skills and capabilities they will require of them, in a conversation well worth listening to. More on this topic The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts, Daniel Susskind and Richard Susskind, 2015 A World Without Work: Technology, Automation, and How We Should Respond, Daniel Susskind, 2020 Daniel Susskind on “A World Without Work” Daniel Susskind on “3 myths about the future of work (and why they're not true)” Daniel Susskind on “the impact of coronavirus on the global workforce and how technology has transformed the future of work” Daniel Susskind on “technology, automation and how we should respond” Daniel Susskind on the future of the workplace Daniel Susskind on how “Robots probably won't take our jobs—for now”
In this special replay episode, Nathan Miller of Proving Ground joins the podcast to talk about hobbies during the pandemic, the digital transformation of AEC, some drawbacks of generative design, privacy concerns with IoT devices and connected buildings, and so much more! LinksProving Ground web siteComputers are Hard blog postNathan Miller on TwitterNathan Miller on LinkedInLeading architecture firms pen open letter to Autodesk over rising costs, sluggish development (Archpaper)Ender 3d Printer (Amazon)Book recommendations:What Technology Wants by Kevin Kelly (Bookshop)The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind (Bookshop)YouTube links and channel recommendations:Nate's NXT BUILD 2020 presentation (YouTube)Proving Ground's YouTube channelColin FurzeAdam Savage's TestedThe HacksmithAlien ExoskeletonLightsaber episodeTRXL episode 018: ‘That Perfect Kind of Venn Diagram', with Dane StokesProject Anklebiter forum thread on 914 WorldMore TRXL Podcast episodesCheck out my other podcast too: Archispeak & PeopleverseMy YouTube channelConnect with EvanTwitterLinkedInInstagramYouTubeEmailSponsorContent is more than Revit families. If it's digital, AVAIL can handle it. Learn more today at https://getavail.com and future-proof your firm's technology investment.
Tomorrows lawyers de Richard Susskind No sabemos cómo serán los abogados del futuro ¿o sí? En este episodio exploramos el rubro legal y las sorpresas que podemos esperar de esta industria en los próximos años.
Lawyers and many other professionals are increasingly challenged to identify their distinctive skills and talents, and the capabilities they possess that cannot be readily replaced by technology or alternative ways of working and access to cheaper options.Richard and Daniel Susskind predict that professionals will be increasingly displaced in an internet society by AI and other technologies. In an earlier book, The End of Lawyers, Richard Susskind had predicted that a new breed of hybrid lawyers will emerge, who are increasingly multi-disciplinary in order to succeed. Hybrid lawyers are quite different to the lawyers of today who already claim they are deeply steeped in neighbouring disciplines, as project managers, strategy, management consultants and more but who often lack the depth of expertise in those neighbouring disciplines. This episode covers:How internet society will bring fundamental change in the way 'practical expertise' of specialists is made availableWhat professionals need to do to move up the food chain to become trusted advisersParallels to the legal industry for other professions.The essentials to be "superbly schooled and genuinely expert” in multiple disciplines.A call for lawyers and others to consider the prototype Brand Tuned AccreditationValuable Resources:Brand Tuned AccreditationBrand Tuned Newsletterwww.brandtuned.com
We talk shop with Litera's Vice-President of Sales for North America, Ashley Miller, including Litera's growth over the past few years, and how long it can stay in that Goldilocks' stage of being just the right size to be a big player, yet still nimble enough to pivot when needed. The recent Changing Lawyer Virtual Summit featured recognizable speakers like Richard Susskind and Seth Godin, but also had Litera's traditional outside the norm type speaker with Mark Schulman, rock drummer for the likes of P!nk and Cher. Miller zeroed in on something that Richard Susskind discussed at the conference about the changes in technology adoption in law firms during the pandemic. Are the advancements we've seen since March 2020 really innovation, or are they really just acceleration of automation designed to keep work afloat? Finally, we talk data and what is meant by the single source of truth when it comes to data. Are we all making informed decisions based on the same, accurate data? Ashley Miller then turns the tables on the hosts by asking where they see the single source of truth in data when it comes to how law firms are going to handle data in the future. Contact Us Twitter: @gebauerm or @glambert. Voicemail: 713-487-7270 Email: geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com. Music: As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca. Transcript is available on 3 Geeks and a Law Blog
Prestar concurso público ainda continua sendo uma excelente opção para quem sonha em ter uma carreira de sucesso. Ao contrário do que muitos pensam, é possível sim aliar a estabilidade e a boa remuneração do cargo público com o empreendedorismo e a inovação que têm despertado interesse em tantas pessoas. E o Bruno Costa é a prova disso. Ele já foi aprovado em três concursos públicos e vai nos contar, neste episódio, como foi a sua trajetória desde os estudos até a consolidação da transformação digital na sua função. Ele é Procurador do Estado da Bahia, atualmente no cargo de Procurador Assistente junto ao Núcleo de Assessoramento ao Procurador Chefe da Procuradoria Fiscal. É também responsável pela condução dos projetos estratégicos da Procuradoria Fiscal, especialmente voltados para estratégias de cobrança com a implementação de ferramentas digitais e estabelecimento de uma cultura data driven. Além disso, já foi Procurador do Estado de São Paulo e advogado da Petrobras. - DIREITO 4.0 PODCAST -Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/direito4.0podcastLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/direito-4-0-podcastE-mail: podcast@floox.com.br - BRUNO COSTA -LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brccosta/ - NOTAS DO EPISÓDIO - FILMEO Código Bill Gates: https://www.netflix.com/br/title/80184771?source=35 CURSOSData Science Academy: https://www.datascienceacademy.com.br/ LIVROSOnline Courts and the Future of Justice, Richard Susskind: https://www.amazon.com.br/Online-Courts-Future-Justice-English-ebook/dp/B081B7RD8H/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=O Advogado do Amanhã, Giovani Ravagnani Bruno Feigelson, Daniel Becker: https://www.amazon.com.br/Advogado-Do-Amanh%C3%A3-Homenagem-Professor/dp/8553215628/ref=asc_df_8553215628/?tag=googleshopp00-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=379818580490&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=8763632833683044453&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=1001566&hvtargid=pla-810600675020&psc=1Organizações Exponenciais: Por Que Elas São 10 Vezes Melhores, Mais Rápidas e Mais Baratas Que a Sua (e o Que Fazer a Respeito), Michael S. Malone, Salim Ismail, Yuri Van Geest: https://www.amazon.com.br/Organiza%C3%A7%C3%B5es-Exponenciais-Melhores-R%C3%A1pidas-Respeito/dp/8550807141/ref=sr_1_1?adgrpid=129044135715&gclid=CjwKCAiA1aiMBhAUEiwACw25MRyijN4l55IZBn1CgqXqm-5Vw0daaHCvG2v9xDI5PUnLwRoshQNp8xoCxEAQAvD_BwE&hvadid=551810168831&hvdev=c&hvlocphy=1001566&hvnetw=g&hvqmt=e&hvrand=2432000588245337067&hvtargid=kwd-327181774291&hydadcr=5730_11235958&keywords=organiza%C3%A7%C3%B5es+exponenciais&qid=1636489775&sr=8-1Gestão de Alta Performance: Tudo o Que Um Gestor Precisa Saber para Gerenciar Equipes e Manter o Foco em Resultados, Andrew S. Grove: https://www.amazon.com.br/Gest%C3%A3o-Alta-Performance-gerenciar-resultados/dp/855717358X/ref=asc_df_855717358X/?tag=googleshopp00-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=379787848265&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=5910987858118526679&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=1001566&hvtargid=pla-1002614595527&psc=1Data Science para Negócios: O Que Você Precisa Saber Sobre Mineração de Dados e Pensamento Analítico de Dados, Foster Provost, Tom Fawcett: https://www.amazon.com.br/Data-Science-para-neg%C3%B3cios-Fawcett/dp/8576089726/ref=sr_1_1?adgrpid=88175056224&gclid=CjwKCAiA1aiMBhAUEiwACw25MZTZJaOwcxfFV8ZAfcp6_HJtawhAMQ6oL23GGJ2U0IYSOXGlwwnFIBoCrG8QAvD_BwE&hvadid=425986526818&hvdev=c&hvlocphy=1001566&hvnetw=g&hvqmt=e&hvrand=10761641914781648074&hvtargid=kwd-907842579757&hydadcr=5684_11235271&keywords=data+science+para+neg%C3%B3cios+livro&qid=1636490077&sr=8-1&ufe=app_do%3Aamzn1.fos.6d798eae-cadf-45de-946a-f477d47705b9
Zamiast promować pracoholizm, lepiej zastanówmy się nad konsekwencjami automatyzacji. Jaki zawód wybrać? Jakie kompetencje szkolić, by utrzymać się na powierzchni cyfrowej rewolucji i nie dać się sztucznej inteligencji wysłać na technologiczne bezrobocie? Pesymiści, którzy obawiają się, że roboty wyprą człowieka z rynku pracy, i optymiści, którzy powitają je jako dawno wypatrywaną pomoc, zgadzają się co do jednego: automatyzacja powiększy kompetencyjną dyskryminację. A w grupie najbardziej zagrożonych znajdą się kobiety. Jak temu zapobiec? Jak powstrzymać rozwój pracowniczego prekariatu? Jaką rolę w tym procesie powinno odegrać państwo? O tym wszystkim porozmawiamy w siedemnastym odcinku podcastu Jak naprawić przyszłość? Moimi rozmówczyniami będą: ✎ Nathalie Berger, współautorka filmu dokumentalnego Witamy na stażu, który możecie oglądać w ramach tegorocznego HER Docs Film Festival. ✎ dr hab. Renata Włoch, socjolożka i politolożka, która obecnie łączy pracę na Wydziale Socjologii UW oraz w Digital Economy Lab UW. Zapraszam! Barbara Sowa *Tekst Jędrzeja Malko (także w wersji do słuchania, dostępnej dla prenumeratorów) na temat dochodu gwarantowanego znajdziecie tutaj: https://magazynpismo.pl/idee/studium/dochod-gwarantowany-jerzej-malko/ Tutaj znajdziecie wszystkie potrzebne informacje o festiwalu HERDocs: https://www.herdocs.pl A poniżej lista autorów i książek cytowanych przez moją rozmówczynię: - Kate Crawford, "Atlas of AI", - Kenneth Cukier, Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, and Francis de Véricourt, Framers: "Human advantage in an age of technology and turmoil"; - Nick Couldry, Ulises A. Mejias, "The costs of connection: How data is colonizing human life and appropriating It for capitalism"; - Richard Susskind, Daniel Susskind, "Przyszłość zawodów. Jak technologia zmieni pracę ekspertów?" - Shoshana Zuboff, "Wiek kapitalizmu inwigilacji. Walka o przyszłość ludzkości na nowej granicy władzy." Montaż: Jakub Dowgird
16 godzin pracy dziennie? Czemu nie 24? Roboty już to potrafią. Zamiast promować pracoholizm, lepiej zastanówmy się nad konsekwencjami automatyzacji.Jaki zawód wybrać? Jakie kompetencje szkolić, by utrzymać się na powierzchni cyfrowej rewolucji i nie dać się sztucznej inteligencji wysłać na technologiczne bezrobocie? Pesymiści, którzy obawiają się, że roboty wyprą człowieka z rynku pracy, i optymiści, którzy powitają je jako dawno wypatrywaną pomoc, zgadzają się co do jednego: automatyzacja powiększy kompetencyjną dyskryminację. A w grupie najbardziej zagrożonych znajdą się kobiety. Jak temu zapobiec? Jak powstrzymać rozwój pracowniczego prekariatu? Jaką rolę w tym procesie powinno odegrać państwo?O tym wszystkim porozmawiamy w siedemnastym odcinku podcastu Jak naprawić przyszłość? Moimi rozmówczyniami będą:✎ Nathalie Berger, współautorka filmu dokumentalnego Witamy na stażu, który możecie oglądać w ramach tegorocznego HER Docs Film Festival.✎ dr hab. Renata Włoch, socjolożka i politolożka, która obecnie łączy pracę na Wydziale Socjologii UW oraz w Digital Economy Lab, interdyscyplinarnym ośrodku badawczym Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego.Zapraszam!Barbara Sowa*Tekst Jędrzeja Malko (także w wersji do słuchania, dostępnej dla prenumeratorów) na temat dochodu gwarantowanego znajdziecie tutaj: https://magazynpismo.pl/idee/studium/dochod-gwarantowany-jerzej-malko/Tutaj znajdziecie wszystkie potrzebne informacje o festiwalu HERDocs: https://www.herdocs.plA poniżej lista autorów i książek cytowanych przez moją rozmówczynię:- Kate Crawford, "Atlas of AI",- Kenneth Cukier, Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, and Francis de Véricourt, Framers: "Human advantage in an age of technology and turmoil";- Nick Couldry, Ulises A. Mejias, "The costs of connection: How data is colonizing human life and appropriating It for capitalism";- Richard Susskind, Daniel Susskind, "Przyszłość zawodów. Jak technologia zmieni pracę ekspertów?"- Shoshana Zuboff, "Wiek kapitalizmu inwigilacji. Walka o przyszłość ludzkości na nowej granicy władzy."Montaż: Jakub Dowgird
Bonjour et bienvenue dans Du Vent Sous La Robe, le podcast qui vous emmène à la rencontre d'acteurs innovants qui construisent le droit de demain. Pour cette trente-et-unième interview, j'accueille Alassane Samb, Camille Sztejnhorn et Mathieu Bouillon. Le point commun entre ces trois personnes ? La création d'Oppus x Lefebvre Dalloz, un outil qui permet de simplifier la rédaction des contrats de travail et autres documents RH, et de vérifier, en temps réel, la conformité des données saisies avec la loi et les conventions collectives. Oppus, c'est l'histoire de la rencontre de trois étudiants tout droit sortis des bancs de la fac, Alassane Samb, Vincent Ferreira et Hugo Menzaghi avec un grand groupe: Lefebvre Dalloz, grâce au partenariat noué par le groupe avec l'association Matrice et l'école 42. Mais c'est surtout l'histoire d'une collaboration entre Alassane, juriste de formation, et son équipe, Camille, directrice de l'innovation du groupe Lefebvre Sarrut et Mathieu, serial entrepreneur, coach du projet et responsable de l'accélérateur de start-up LightSpeed créé par le groupe. Avec Alassane, Camille et Mathieu, on a parlé : - De l'outil qu'ils ont développé et de comment il fonctionne ; - De comment on construit un projet d'innovation dans le domaine du droit ; - Des clés de succès et des erreurs à ne pas commettre ; - De l'intérêt pour un grand groupe et une start-up de collaborer ensemble pour créer un outil innovant ; - De l'accélérateur de start-up LightSpeed créé par le groupe Lefebvre Sarrut ; - Mais aussi de la nécessité de s'inspirer de ce qui existe en dehors du droit ; - Et de comment penser l'expérience utilisateur pour rendre les outils les plus simples et efficaces possibles. Plein de conseils et de retours d'expérience hyper intéressants dans cet épisode, alors tous à vos écouteurs ! Pour aller plus loin : - Oppus X Lefebvre Dalloz ; - Tomorrow's Lawyers: An Introduction to Your Future de Richard Susskind ; - Matrice ; - Ecole 42 ; - Don't make me think de Steve Krug ; - Site regroupant différentes ressources sur l'apprentissage du design ; - The Lean Startup d'Eric Ries ; - Innovation stories ; - Le Lab d' innovation de Lefebvre Sarrut ; - L'accélérateur de start-up Lightspeed; - Le podcast Planche mixte de Mathieu sur la musique ; - Life is life d'Opus ; - Sarà perchè ti amo de Ricchi e poveri ; - Lil Nas X ; - Good vibrations de Marky Mark and the funky bunch.
His firm's first game-changing tech adoption was a trio of fax machines that outpaced the competition and he says AI is the next big player. But Geo Bellas – nicknamed Geo as a reference to Neo in The Matrix – hasn't been a techie simply because of the success it's brought his practice over the past forty years.He says it's also the fun of getting a “new toy.” Further proof that staying true to your passions in your legal career, and having fun, is an important aspect of long-term success.Forty years of game-changing tech and what the future holds for the legal profession:The first tech in his firm and why he adapted early (01:30)A prediction of law firms' futures (18:00)Attorneys working with purpose (32:08)Geo's advice for younger attorneys looking to build storied careers (41:05)Legal Innovation is More Than Game-Changing Tech. It is “I don't think I ever sat there and said, ‘I got to do this, I got to go get this,' I just wanted to get a toy. And, you know the old adage is he who dies with the most toys wins.”“There is a movement to have a form of artificial intelligence decide small cases to eliminate the load on the courts…. The only thing is that computers haven't learned to absorb all of the other factors…that help us make a decision. But eventually that's going to happen and computers are going to take a lot of the work off of lawyers and lawyers are gonna have to find a way to fit into that new paradigm.”“[Zoom] is creating the efficiency and lawyers are still adapting to it. I mean, I see lawyers, getting on…and there are still lawyers who sit there and have to have either their grandchildren, or somebody help them open up the Zoom window so they can participate in a webinar by Zoom. But that will change. There was a time where lawyers didn't know how to use a fax machine. But they got [it], somehow they figured that out.” GEORGE “GEO” BELLAS, An Early Adopter of Game-Changing Tech for Law FirmsChicago Business Litigation Lawyer who has used technology in litigation for over 40 years. Geo's firm serves as a trusted business advisor to business owners and has been promoting the use of technology in the practice for over 35 years.www.bellas-wachowski.comBlog: www.businessattorneychicago.com Geo's Social MediaLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/georgebellas/Facebook: www.facebook.com/george.s.bellasTwitter: www.twitter.com/GeoBellas Keep Reading About Game-Changing Tech in Law “Legal futurist Richard Susskind sees technology as a path to better justice” ABA, September 2020https://www.americanbar.org/news/abanews/publications/youraba/2020/youraba-september-2020/futurist-susskind-sees/“A General Approach for Predicting the Behavior of the Supreme Court of the United States” Daniel M. Katz, Michael J. Bommarito, Josh Blackman, 16 February 2017https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2463244 Have comments, questions, or concerns? Contact us at feedback@1958lawyer.com
Alex Hamilton (Twitter @alexhamiltonrad) is the CEO of Radiant Law a Newlaw firm that he set up alongside others after his career in Biglaw (ex Partner at Latham & Watkins). Inspired by Lean thinking principles, the writing of thinkers like Richard Susskind, Mitch Kowalski, and spurred on by his frustration at the futility of trying to change law firm practices from the inside, Alex was left with no other choice than to set up his own law firm.Books/Authors/blogs referenced and recommended in this episode include:Out of the Crisis - DemingLaw21 Blog - Jordan FurlongAvoid Extinction - Mitch KowalskiDecisions That Matter - Jillson, Hayse, and FletcherThis is Lean - Niklas & Par
O futurista mor do direto, Richard Susskind, vem provocando há dez anos: a justiça é um lugar ou um serviço? E aí o que você me diz, considerando que menos de 50% da população mundial (OCDE) estão conectados à internet? Com essa e outras perguntas, para o episódio de hoje, provoquei o multiprofissional Daniel Becker, advogado, professor, articulista de mão cheia, sócio do Lima Feigelson Advogados, Director of New Technologies do CBMA, coordenador de vários cursos na Future Law, um “liberal progressista”, e foi um bate papo leve e profundo ao mesmo tempo. Becker fez ainda várias outras reflexões sobre ciências humanas, privacidade, LGPD e sobre o futuro do direito e da prática jurídica. Para mim, um privilégio conversar com o Becker, que acompanho de perto desde a época do ótimo portal que fundou, o Lex Machina.
Special guest Nathan Miller of Proving Ground joins the podcast to talk about hobbies during the pandemic, the digital transformation of AEC, some drawbacks of generative design, privacy concerns with IoT devices and connected buildings, and so much more!LinksProving Ground web siteComputers are Hard blog postConveyorSemanticLunchboxNathan Miller on TwitterNathan Miller on LinkedInLeading architecture firms pen open letter to Autodesk over rising costs, sluggish development (Archpaper)Ender 3d Printer (Amazon)Book recommendations:What Technology Wants by Kevin Kelly (Bookshop)The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind (Bookshop)YouTube links and channel recommendations:Nate's NXT BUILD 2020 presentationProving Ground's YouTube channelColin FurzeAdam Savage's TestedThe HacksmithAlien ExoskeletonLightsaber episodeTRXL episode 018: ‘That Perfect Kind of Venn Diagram’, with Dane StokesProject Anklebiter forum thread on 914 World
Já falamos em episódios anteriores sobre resolução de conflitos online, arbitragem, blockchain e contratos inteligentes. Da união de todos esses conceitos, surge a Criptoarbitragem, que promete revolucionar a forma como resolvemos os conflitos online. Por meio de plataformas descentralizadas de resolução de conflitos, ela pode solucionar, de maneira rápida, eficiente e barata, as milhares disputas que acontecem no mundo virtual. Para falar sobre isso, eu conversei com a Aline Dias. Ela é advogada, sócia do Muriel Medici Franco Advogados, Mestre em Direito Processual Civil pela USP, professora e escritora de artigos e livro sobre resolução de conflitos. - DIREITO 4.0 PODCAST -Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/direito4.0podcastLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/direito-4-0-podcastE-mail: podcast@floox.com.br - ALINE DIAS -LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alinehdiasInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/aline_hdias/ - NOTAS DO EPISÓDIO -Kleros: https://kleros.io/Online Courts and the Future of Justice, Richard Susskind: https://www.amazon.com.br/Online-Courts-Justice-Richard-Susskind/dp/0198838360/ref=sr_1_1?adgrpid=81675020299&dchild=1&gclid=Cj0KCQjwuL_8BRCXARIsAGiC51DNNruhoshfSmku7ABU-7XeSoyjf-JjIzG4ZwuQEhQbq3a5puRtjygaAp5LEALw_wcB&hvadid=425986426213&hvdev=c&hvlocphy=1031849&hvnetw=g&hvqmt=b&hvrand=5741441475580114428&hvtargid=kwd-873193829215&hydadcr=5682_11235263&keywords=richard+susskind+online+courts&qid=1603300783&sr=8-1&tag=hydrbrgk-20Digital Justice: Technology and the Internet of Disputes, Ethan Katsh e Orna Rabinovich-Einy: https://www.amazon.com.br/dp/B06XD6SMNH/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1Análise Econômica do Processo Civil,Erik Navarro Wolkart: https://www.amazon.com.br/dp/B07VT8XSRZ/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1Manual de Design de Sistemas de Disputas: Criação de Estratégias e Processos Eficazes para Tratar Conflitos, Diego Faleck: https://www.amazon.com.br/dp/B07KT8YQS7/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1
Shownotes can be found at https://www.profitwithlaw.com/139. Happy Birthday Tyler! In this episode, Moshe Amsel shares his thoughts on what things may look like for your law firm in 15-20 years when his son Tyler will first be potentially seeking legal services of some kind. The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically accelerated the changes of the legal industry and the way we do business today will end before we know it. So how do you prepare for this and what steps should you be taking today? Glad you asked, listen to this episode to find out. Resources mentioned: The Future of The Professions by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind www.profitwithlaw.com/thefutureoftheprofessionsbook Join our Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/lawfirmgrowthsummit/ To request a show topic, recommend a guest or ask a question for the show, please send an email to info@dreambuilderfinancial.com. Connect with Moshe on: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/moshe.amsel LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/mosheamsel/
Shownotes can be found at https://www.profitwithlaw.com/138. In this interview, Moshe Amsel and Jonathan Petts discuss the future of the legal industry and what it will take to be the go-to lawyer in your practice area. They talk about strategies on how to compete with new companies and software that provide certain legal services for free or at a much lower cost. Jonathan also talks about what needs to be done to get your firm noticed by potential clients. Resources mentioned: Episode 108 - FREE Marketing!?!? Sign Me Up! With Sid Peddinti - http://profitwithlaw.com/108 Immigrants Like Us - Immigrationhelp.org, Learning Center - https://www.immigrationhelp.org/learning-center, Team - https://www.immigrationhelp.org/about How to Renew Your DACA Status in 2020 - https://www.immigrationhelp.org/learning-center/how-to-renew-your-daca-status-in-2020 The Future of The Professions by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind www.profitwithlaw.com/thefutureoftheprofessionsbook Join our Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/lawfirmgrowthsummit/ To request a show topic, recommend a guest or ask a question for the show, please send an email to info@dreambuilderfinancial.com. Connect with Moshe on: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/moshe.amsel LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/mosheamsel/
In questo episodio dedicato ai libri che si occupano di diritto, tecnologie e società analizziamo con cura il ben noto saggio di Richard Susskind "L'avvocato di domani - Il futuro della professione legale tra rivoluzione tecnologica e intelligenza artificiale", tradotto in lingua italiana da Guerini Next.
Nossa tendência é pensar que o caminho para o sucesso profissional é uma linha reta, em que tudo é muito claro e definido, bastando que nos esforcemos muito para atingi-lo. Quando vemos uma pessoa que consideramos bem-sucedida, não pensamos nos erros, dúvidas, fracassos e inseguranças que essa pessoa certamente teve para chegar aonde está. Cada trajetória profissional é única e, quando menos esperamos, os pontos se conectam e tudo começa a fazer sentido. Com o Pedro Esteves não foi diferente. Da Biologia ao Direito, passando pela tecnologia, ele encontrou na Engenharia Jurídica e no empreendedorismo as suas paixões. Ele é biólogo, advogado, empreendedor, programador e pesquisador de tecnologias aplicadas ao direito. - DIREITO 4.0 PODCAST -| Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/direito4.0podcast || LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/direito-4-0-podcast || E-mail: podcast@floox.com.br | - PEDRO ESTEVES -| LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/perfilpedroesteves || Instagram: https://instagram.com/pedro_estevs?igshid=1cexgn5iajzkw || Automato: http://automato.info | - NOTAS DO EPISÓDIO -| Tomorrow's Lawyers: An Introduction to Your Future, Richard Susskind: https://www.amazon.com.br/Tomorrows-Lawyers-Introduction-Future-English-ebook/dp/B072JC98RX/ref=sr_1_1?__mk_pt_BR=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&crid=R4QM7R34W6O8&dchild=1&keywords=tomorrow%27s+lawyers+an+introduction+to+your+future&qid=1596813081&sprefix=tomorrow%2Caps%2C272&sr=8-1 || Hábitos Atômicos, James Clear: https://www.amazon.com.br/H%C3%A1bitos-At%C3%B4micos-M%C3%A9todo-Comprovado-Livrar/dp/8550807567/ref=sr_1_1?__mk_pt_BR=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&crid=2RRTUJMVXF468&dchild=1&keywords=habitos+atomicos&qid=1596813098&sprefix=habitos+a%2Caps%2C272&sr=8-1 || Podcast com Nívio Ziviani: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0k9CVXmscInD2PuegRNwEQ?si=fbDy6hsJQHaizGJMHIkzRQ |
Until now, the legal profession has largely viewed technology as a thing that should be grafted onto the very traditional practice of law, but the onset of the pandemic has forced this opinion to change rapidly. Lawyers and judges who once eschewed the idea of online legal practice–and particularly online courts–are now working to find ways to innovate legal and court services to continue providing access to justice. In this edition of the Digital Edge, hosts Sharon Nelson and Jim Calloway welcome Professor Richard Susskind to survey the new landscape of online courts and discuss changing views toward technology across the profession. Professor Richard Susskind OBE is an author, speaker, and independent adviser to major professional firms and to national governments. Special thanks to our sponsors, Clio, Nexa, Scorpion, and Blackletter Podcast.
Until now, the legal profession has largely viewed technology as a thing that should be grafted onto the very traditional practice of law, but the onset of the pandemic has forced this opinion to change rapidly. Lawyers and judges who once eschewed the idea of online legal practice–and particularly online courts–are now working to find ways to innovate legal and court services to continue providing access to justice. In this edition of the Digital Edge, hosts Sharon Nelson and Jim Calloway welcome Professor Richard Susskind to survey the new landscape of online courts and discuss changing views toward technology across the profession. Professor Richard Susskind OBE is an author, speaker, and independent adviser to major professional firms and to national governments. Special thanks to our sponsors, Clio, Nexa, Scorpion, and Blackletter Podcast.
In this conversation I talk to Professor Richard Susskind about the impact of AI on professional jobs. The discussion is based on his book ’The Future of Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts.
https://entrearchitect.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/EvanTroxel600px.jpg ()The Digital Practice with Architect Futurist Evan Troxel Technology changes everything. The profession is always changing, and our role as designers of built environment will change, too. When you’re strategizing about the future of your small architecture firm, is there someone at your decision-making table that brings the necessary digital expertise? This week on EntreArchitect podcast, The Digital Practice with Architect Futurist Evan Troxel. Connect with Evan online at http://evantroxel.com (EvanTroxel.com). Check out the podcast at http://archispeakpodcast.com (ArchispeakPodcast.com), or follow him on https://www.instagram.com/etroxel/ (Instagram), https://twitter.com/etroxel (Twitter), and http://www.linkedin.com/in/evantroxel (LinkedIn). Are you a Gābl Member? https://preview.convertkit-mail.com/click/dpheh0hz/aHR0cDovL2VudHJlYXJjaGl0ZWN0LmNvbS9nYWJsbm93 (Gābl Members) is a way for you to help us build Gābl Media (our new media network for podcast and video production) into a network that will truly change the world. As a Gābl Member, you will always gain first access to new shows and have an opportunity to provide feedback on the content we currently have in development. We are building this media network for you, so you should have an opportunity to help us build it. If you are ready to support Gābl Media, just https://preview.convertkit-mail.com/click/78i7h8hv/aHR0cDovL2VudHJlYXJjaGl0ZWN0LmNvbS9nYWJsbm93 (click here) and join Gābl Members as a Charter Member for only $19 per year. Visit Our Platform Sponsors Freshbooks is the easy way to send invoices, manage expenses, and track your time. Access your free 30-day trial at https://entrearchitect.com/freshbooks (EntreArchitect.com/FreshBooks). (Enter EntreArchitect) ARCAT has huge libraries of free content, Specs, CAD, BIM and more. No registration required. Want to collaborate with colleagues in real-time? Visit https://entrearchitect.com/ARCAT (EntreArchitect.com/ARCAT) and click Charrette for more information. Mentioned in this Episode https://entrearchitect.com/podcast/entrearch/ea135-architect-registration-exam/ (EA135: Hacking Your Life for ARE Success and Beyond with Architect Evan Troxel [Podcast]) https://entrearchitect.com/mp-files/value-based-compensation-by-steve-l-wintner-aia-emeritus.pdf/ (The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts, Updated Edition by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind [Book]) The post https://entrearchitect.com/podcast/entrearch/the-digital-practice/ (EA321: The Digital Practice with Architect Futurist Evan Troxel) appeared first on https://entrearchitect.com (EntreArchitect // Small Firm Entrepreneur Architects).
Richard and Daniel Susskind lay out their vision of a future in which expert knowledge is shared and distributed, and the role of the specialized professional becomes antiquated. Authors Daniel Susskind and Richard Susskind examine the professions that they predict will be eliminated in the near future, and what technologies and systems will replace them. They argue that the role of doctors, CPAs, teachers, lawyers, priests, and many others will either become obsolete or radically transformed. *** Do you want more free audiobook summaries like this? Download our app for free at QuickRead.com/App and get access to hundreds of free book and audiobook summaries.
Professor Richard Susskind OBE—author of Tomorrow’s Lawyers, The Future of the Professions, and Online Courts and the Future of Justice—has been writing about the future of the legal industry for decades. Now that a somewhat dystopian version of that future has arrived, Richard is again looking ahead to understand where legal is going and how it might get there. In this episode, Richard and Clio CEO Jack Newton share a fascinating back-and-forth about the ways law firms are currently reacting to COVID-19, how they should be reacting, and how long it might take for “normal” to return. Additionally, Richard outlines the article he co-wrote with his son, Daniel, about “The Five Stages of Recovery from COVID-19.”
MUT.TALK: Der Podcast mit mutigen Menschen für mutige Menschen und solche, die es werden wollen. Für Unternehmer, Selbständige, Menschen in Verantwortung, Alltagsabenteurer, Träumer und Macher, Aussteiger und Aufsteiger. ******************************************************************** Heute sprechen wir über mutige Veränderungen und den Wandel in gewissen Branchen, im Speziellen über die Digitalisierung in der Rechtsbranche. Ioannis Martinis ist eine ausgewiesene Kapazität wenn es um das Thema LEGAL TECH geht. Er doziert zu disruptiven Technologien an Hochschulen und Fachhochschulen und ist als gefragter Speaker zu diesen Themen national und international unterwegs. Als Head of Legal Tech bei der Coop Rechtsschutz AG leitet Ioannis Martinis die Artificial Intelligence Projekte der innovativsten Schweizer Rechtsschutzversicherung. Beim Startup YLEX, einer Tochterunternehmung der Coop Rechtsschutz mit digitaler Plattform für juristische Unterstützung und Rechtsberatung, verantwortet er die Kommunikation und das Marketing. Als Mitglied des Executive Board der Swiss LegalTech Association und Ambassador for Switzerland der European Legal Technology Association trägt er bei den führenden Branchenverbänden seinen Teil dazu bei, dass Thema Legal Tech einem weiten Kreis von Interessierten näher zu bringen. ******************************************************************** Ioannis online: https://ioannismartinis.ch https://www.linkedin.com/in/ioannis-martinis https://www.facebook.com/ioannis.martinis ******************************************************************** Büchertipps von Ioannis: Jäger, Hirten, Kritiker von Richard David Precht: https://amzn.to/2yjwRdS Tomorrow's Lawyers von Richard Susskind: https://amzn.to/3eqj1qI ******************************************************************** Filmtipps von Ioannis: Lost in Translation: https://amzn.to/3erzN8T Ex Machina: https://amzn.to/2K6djMP ******************************************************************** App-Tipp von Ioannis: Republik https://apps.apple.com/ch/app/republik/id1392772910 https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=app.republik&hl=de_CH
Ever since the publication of his seminal 1996 book, The Future of Law, Richard Susskind has remained the world’s most-recognized and most-respected speaker and author on the future of legal services. But even he could not have foreseen the sudden relevance of his latest book, Online Courts and the Future of Justice. On this episode of LawNext, Susskind joins host Bob Ambrogi for a conversation about the legal profession and the judicial system in a time of global pandemic. Will the pandemic fast-forward law’s leap into the future? Will there be fundamental change in legal services delivery? Will courts move online more quickly than even he had thought? Susskind shares his thoughts on these questions and more. Susskind is an author, speaker, and independent adviser to major professional firms and national governments. His main area of expertise is the future of professional service and, in particular, the ways in which technology and the Internet are changing the work of lawyers. He has worked on legal technology for over 30 years. Susskind has, since 1998, been IT adviser to the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales. He is president of the Society for Computers and Law, chair of the Online Dispute Resolution Advisory Group of the Civil Justice Council, and chair of the Advisory Board of the Oxford Internet Institute, where he is also a visiting professor. He also holds professorships at UCL, Gresham College, London, and the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. NEW: Comment on this show: Record a voice comment on your mobile phone and send it to info@lawnext.com. We are now on Patreon! Subscribe to our page to be able to access show transcripts, or to submit a question for our guests. Thank you to our sponsor, MyCase, and to John E. Grant and Agile Professionals LLC for being a lead Patreon supporter of our show.
Today we are honored to present our conversation Richard Susskind, one of the worlds leading intellectuals on technology in the law and the future of work. Dr. Susskind is also the author of some of the best-known books involving the modernization of law and lawyers - including "the Future of Law", "Tomorrows Lawyers", and his most recent book "Online Courts and the Future of Justice". In our conversation, Richard considers the future of our court system, the incentives for law firms to modernize, and his prediction that tomorrow's core legal jobs will revolve around technology and the creation of systems.
Nessa nova realidade, em que os dados ganham uma importância cada vez maior e tornam-se um verdadeiro diferencial competitivo, surgem novas oportunidades para o profissional do direito que quer se tornar mais estratégico. A Shaiala Marques foi uma das primeiras advogadas do país a atuar nessa área e hoje é Cientista de Dados Jurídicos na Softplan, uma das maiores empresas de software do país. Aprender a interpretar dados para extrair informações valiosas, integrar uma equipe técnica para o desenvolvimento de um produto, ajudar a treinar robôs e a criar algoritmos são apenas algumas das muitas tarefas que o Cientista de Dados Jurídicos pode desenvolver, e é sobre isso que vamos conversar neste episódio. - DIREITO 4.0 PODCAST -| Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/direito4.0podcast || LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/direito-4-0-podcast || E-mail: podcast@floox.com.br | - SHAIALA MARQUES -| LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shaiala || Softplan: https://www.softplan.com.br | - NOTAS DO EPISÓDIO - Livros| Tomorrow's Lawyers: An Introduction to Your Future, Richard Susskind: https://www.amazon.com.br/Tomorrows-Lawyers-Introduction-Your-Future/dp/0198796633/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1581049762&sr=8-2 || Nudge: Como tomar melhores decisões sobre saúde, dinheiro e felicidade, Richard H. Thaler e Cass R. Sunstein: https://www.amazon.com.br/Nudge-melhores-decis%C3%B5es-dinheiro-felicidade/dp/8547000801/ref=sr_1_1?__mk_pt_BR=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&keywords=nudge&qid=1581039853&sr=8-1 | Cursos| Future Law: http://futurelaw.com.br || Coursera: https://www.coursera.org | Blog| Convex: https://www.convexla.com.br/blog |
Law Technology Now host Ralph Baxter sits down with Professor Richard Susskind OBE, one of the foremost experts and advocates for the implementation of technology with legal services delivery. They discuss Richard’s latest book, Online Courts and the Future of Justice, the limited or nonexistent access to justice problem for most of the world, and how the adoption of AI and online courts might look, might alleviate the pain points, and could change the practice of law altogether. Professor Richard Susskind OBE is an author, speaker, and independent adviser to major professional firms and to national governments. Special thanks to our sponsors, Headnote.
Ioannis Martinis ist Head of Legal-Tech bei der Coop Rechtsschutz AG und arbeitet daran den Zugang zu Rechtsberatung für jedermann zu vereinfachen, indem er auf Künstliche Intelligenz und neue Geschäftsmodelle setzt. Aus diesem Podcast könnt ihr mitnehmen (1) Welche KI Use Cases es für Rechtsschutzversicherungen gibt (2) Welche Teile der Rechtsberatung in Zukunft technologie-getrieben sein werden (3) und wie KI neue Geschäftsmodelle ermöglicht ### Personen ### Gast: Ioannis Martinis https://ioannismartinis.ch/ Moderation: Fabian Merkel https://www.linkedin.com/in/fabian-merkel/ ### Shownotes ### Coop Rechtsschutz AG: https://www.cooprecht.ch/de/home Legal AI – Es bleibt alles anders: https://research.owlit.de/document/4607fa06-3752-3693-8c19-45ac2f512662 YLEX: https://legal-tech-verzeichnis.de/fachartikel/das-neue-rechtsberatungskonzept-der-ylex-ag/ Ioannis Martinis auf "AI in Business" am 26.03.2020: https://ai-zurich.ch/speaker-ioannis-martinis/ ### Buchempfehlung ### Online Courts and the Future of Justice von Richard Susskind: https://www.justbooks.de/search/?author=&title=&lang=de&isbn=978-0-19-883836-4&new_used=*&destination=de¤cy=EUR&mode=basic&st=sr&ac=qr
I spoke with Richard Susskind, the author of the newly released book, Online Courts and the Future of Justice, among many others, including The End of Lawyers? and The Future of the Professions. We discussed his inspiration for writing Online Courts, how it aligns with his prior work, the key messages that he hopes readers will take from the book, which courts will change first, and how listeners can be bold in transforming their careers and practices to prepare for a different future in the law.
I spoke with Richard Susskind, the author of the newly released book, Online Courts and the Future of Justice, among many others, including The End of Lawyers? and The Future of the Professions. We discussed his inspiration for writing Online Courts, how it aligns with his prior work, the key messages that he hopes readers will take from the book, which courts will change first, and how listeners can be bold in transforming their careers and practices to prepare for a different future in the law.
I spoke with Richard Susskind, the author of the newly released book, Online Courts and the Future of Justice, among many others, including The End of Lawyers? and The Future of the Professions. We discussed his inspiration for writing Online Courts, how it aligns with his prior work, the key messages that he hopes readers will take from the book, which courts will change first, and how listeners can be bold in transforming their careers and practices to prepare for a different future in the law.
I spoke with Richard Susskind, the author of the newly released book, Online Courts and the Future of Justice, among many others, including The End of Lawyers? and The Future of the Professions. We discussed his inspiration for writing Online Courts, how it aligns with his prior work, the key messages that he hopes readers will take from the book, which courts will change first, and how listeners can be bold in transforming their careers and practices to prepare for a different future in the law.
I spoke with Richard Susskind, the author of the newly released book, Online Courts and the Future of Justice, among many others, including The End of Lawyers? and The Future of the Professions. We discussed his inspiration for writing Online Courts, how it aligns with his prior work, the key messages that he hopes readers will take from the book, which courts will change first, and how listeners can be bold in transforming their careers and practices to prepare for a different future in the law.
Geralmente, quando pensamos em futuro, pensamos em tecnologia, robôs ou supercomputadores. Sim, teremos tudo isso, mas de nada vai adiantar se não estivermos focados na gestão e nos procedimentos internos. Você já considerou ter uma equipe mista, sendo uma parte física e outra remota? E uma equipe sob demanda? Sabe qual tipo de marketing jurídico tem mais retorno para você? Já testou diferentes tipos de layout de recurso para descobrir qual tem mais probabilidade de conseguir uma decisão favorável? O que fez recentemente para reduzir o custo do seu cliente?Neste episódio eu converso com Gabriel Magalhães, advogado e CEO da Freelaw, uma plataforma de contratação de advogados sob demanda. Gabriel já entrevistou mais de 200 advogados e sabe exatamente quais são as maiores dores dos escritórios e departamentos jurídicos. Ouça e aprenda várias técnicas e ferramentas do mundo das startups que vão auxiliá-lo a se preparar para o futuro do direito. - GABRIEL MAGALHÃES -| LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gabrielgmagalhaes |- DIREITO 4.0 PODCAST -| Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/direito4.0podcast || LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/direito-4-0-podcast || E-mail: podcast@floox.com.br |- NOTAS DO EPISÓDIO -Freelaw| Site: https://freelaw.work || Blog: https://freelaw.work/blog || Podcast: http://podcast.freelaw.work |Ferramentas| Trello: trello.com || Asana: asana.com || Legalboards: https://legalboards.io |Cursos| Rock Content: https://rockcontent.com || Hubspot: https://academy.hubspot.com || Udemy: https://www.udemy.com || Guia de publicidade no Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/business/help/337584869654348 || Monika Hosaki: https://www.imersaoprime.com.br |Livros| Startup Enxuta, Eric Reis: https://amzn.to/36ail4K || Tomorrow´s Lawyers, Richard Susskind: https://amzn.to/2BSvFNo |Evento| Global Legal Hackathon:https://globallegalhackathon.com |
The Law School Toolbox Podcast: Tools for Law Students from 1L to the Bar Exam, and Beyond
Welcome back to the Law School Toolbox podcast! Today, we’re talking about books related to the legal system that you might want to read during the summer before starting law school. These books are interesting, and you might even learn something in the process! In this episode we discuss: Non-fiction stories about famous lawyers and judges Classics on the law school experience Recommended thrillers developed around legal issues Books that will help you get into a positive, productive mindset - not just for law school, but in general Legal-related authors whose body of work is worth exploring Why casebooks, hornbooks, commercial outlines, and the E&E series can be overwhelming and confusing to read in preparation for law school, so you can skip them for now Resources: My Beloved World, by Sonia Sotomayor (https://www.amazon.com/Sonia-Sotomayor-Beloved-World-Paperback/dp/B01FODGF1K) Becoming, by Michelle Obama (https://becomingmichelleobama.com/) My Own Words, by Ruth Bader Ginsburg (https://www.amazon.com/Own-Words-Ruth-Bader-Ginsburg/dp/150114524X) A Civil Action, by Jonathan Harr (https://www.amazon.com/Civil-Action-Jonathan-Harr/dp/0679772677) The Buffalo Creek Disaster, by Gerald Stern (https://www.amazon.com/Buffalo-Creek-Disaster-Survivors-Coal-Mining/dp/0307388492) Gideon's Trumpet, by Anthony Lewis (https://www.amazon.com/Gideons-Trumpet-Prisoner-Supreme-Court/dp/0679723129) Terminal Ambition, by Kate McGuinness (http://terminal-ambition.com/) The Firm, by John Grisham (http://www.jgrisham.com/the-firm/) One L, by Scott Turow (https://www.amazon.com/One-Turbulent-Story-Harvard-School/dp/0143119028) The Paper Chase, by John Jay Osborn Jr. (https://www.amazon.com/Paper-Chase-John-Jay-Osborn/dp/0983698007) Mindsight, by Dan Siegel (https://www.drdansiegel.com/books/mindsight/) Mindset, by Carol Dweck (https://mindsetonline.com/) Deep Work, by Cal Newport (http://calnewport.com/books/deep-work/) So Good They Can't Ignore You, by Cal Newport (http://calnewport.com/books/so-good/) The Gifts of Imperfection, by Brené Brown (https://www.amazon.com/Gifts-Imperfection-Think-Supposed-Embrace/dp/159285849X) The End of Lawyers?, by Richard Susskind (https://www.amazon.com/End-Lawyers-Rethinking-nature-services-ebook/dp/B00AF6MZ4I) 24 Hours with 24 Lawyers, by Jasper Kim (https://www.amazon.com/24-Hours-Lawyers-Traditional-Non-Traditional/dp/0314276319) Swimming Lessons for Baby Sharks, by Grover Cleveland (https://lessonsforsharks.com/book/synopsis/) Getting to Maybe, by Richard Michael Fischl (https://www.amazon.com/Getting-Maybe-Excel-School-Exams/dp/0890897603) Download the Transcript (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/episode-193-books-to-read-before-law-school/) If you enjoy the podcast, we'd love a nice review and/or rating on Apple Podcasts (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/law-school-toolbox-podcast/id1027603976) or your favorite listening app. And feel free to reach out to us directly. You can always reach us via the contact form on the Law School Toolbox website (http://lawschooltoolbox.com/contact). If you're concerned about the bar exam, check out our sister site, the Bar Exam Toolbox (http://barexamtoolbox.com/). You can also sign up for our weekly podcast newsletter (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/get-law-school-podcast-updates/) to make sure you never miss an episode! Thanks for listening! Alison & Lee
I'm so excited to welcome Peter Allen to the show. Peter and I have been friends since our early teens and since he now lives on the other side of the state we rarely see each other. This silly project of mine created an excuse for us to chat. Speaking of, this is our first Skype call podcast so consider this my standard apologies for audio quality, figuring stuff out, etc. :) Pete went into the law right after school but has since moved into trust/financial management for Baker Boyer Bank (https://www.bakerboyer.com/) in Walla Walla, WA. Pete talks a bit about raising girls vs. boys, having a newly-teenage daughter and how they've managed phone use/social media for her (see below) and having twins. One of his boys is dyslexic and Pete shares what clued them in to his dyslexia, how they had it officially diagnosed and how he and his wife Carol had to become advocates for their boy. Pete also shares a really interesting story about how a specialized school he's attended has created a simulation for parents and siblings to show what a dyslexic kid goes through. If you know anyone with dyslexia (child or adult) you'll get a lot out of that section. It's a surprisingly emotional gut punch to put yourself in those kids' shoes. Also, have a look at the link at the bottom, a really funny article Peter wrote on his company's blog comparing market volatility to his daughter. I think you'll enjoy it. Here are the items we discussed on the show: - A book about where different careers are headed: The Future of the Professions by Richard Susskind - https://www.amazon.com/Future-Professions-Technology-Transform-Experts/dp/0198799071/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1548375206&sr=8-1&keywords=the+future+of+the+professions - Contract with your kid for phone usage - https://1drv.ms/w/s!AvKzpoD76W8waWet177FLtEU3ys Dyslexia resources: - A book we didn't have a chance to discuss but that Peter's wife Carol recommends: Overcoming Dyslexia by Sally Shaywitz - https://www.amazon.com/Overcoming-Dyslexia-Complete-Science-Based-Problems/dp/0679781595/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1548375498&sr=8-1&keywords=Overcoming+Dyslexia+by+Sally+Shaywitz - Hamlin Robinson school in Seattle, WA - https://www.hamlinrobinson.org/ - Orton Gillingham reading method - https://www.ortonacademy.org/resources/what-is-the-orton-gillingham-approach/ - International Dyslexia Association - https://dyslexiaida.org/ And one bit of fun: an article Peter wrote on the blog of his company, Baker Boyer Bank comparing market volatility and his daughter - https://www.bakerboyer.com/resources/financial-intelligence/my-daughter-is-monster As always if you'd like to support us please visit our sponsors or the sites and businesses mentioned during our shows. Or the easiest way to support us is to visit our Amazon affiliate link (https://www.amazon.com/?&_encoding=UTF8&tag=famousfin-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=5681ed1d0adde1ee2614ece4c3a0025b&camp=1789&creative=9325) where you can shop as you always do with no product cost increase but Amazon will kick a little bit back to us which helps cover our production and marketing costs. Thanks!
In this episode, I chat with Rob Macadam, Director of Legal Solutions for High Q and recovering M&A lawyer. We discuss what it takes to leave the law (a little bravery and a lot of chutzpah!) [@:17], his favorite kind of beer (“real ale”) [@:41], and how you, too, can become a "legal geek" and break into the fast-growing legal tech field [@:35]. Along the way, Rob and I compare notes on what it's like to practice in the U.S. versus the U.K. (although he's never worn a wig!) [@:23].You can follow Rob on Twitter here; find out more about Richard Susskind, whose eye-opening book, Tomorrow's Lawyers, Rob mentions on the show, here; and read more about legal tech associations and conferences here and here.The music featured on this week's episode is courtesy of the Free Music Archive: Strum (Capture My Heart) by Phish Funk, via a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 International License.
Ep 01 Productive Contracts: Reverse Sandwich Contracts with Verity White Mindset: Useful and usable What if lawyers wrote beautiful contracts that everyone could read, understand, and use? What if these contracts helped make negotiation easier and reduced commercial disputes? There is a fun and easy way to structure a contract so you get all the legal power of a traditional contract with ridiculous amounts of productivity for everyone that touches the contract (including lawyers, clients and customers). These are called Reverse Sandwich Contracts(TM). And that’s what we look at in Episode One. KEY TAKEAWAYS When you Reverse Sandwich a contract, you get a contract that is: more ‘hands off’ from the legal team - useful and usable for lawyers and non-lawyers - easier to manage and control - client-friendly - optimised for automated workflows - ready for paperless offices - fast to navigate - simple to vary later - futuristic and sexy! The ultimate structure aim of a productive Reverse Sandwich Contract is to get good stuff we often need to know or that often changes at the front (Key Details Table) and back (Schedule) and standardised stuff that doesn’t change in the middle (Standard Terms). Golden rule: If it changes regularly, pull it from the middle and put it up the front into a Key Details table or at the back into a Schedule (see the Checklist Legal Resources for examples) LINKS Earl of Sandwich: PJ Grosley, ‘Tour to London’ (1772). Big rocks vs Gravel: Steven Covey, ‘First Things First’, (1994). Cannot recommend this book enough: Daniel and Richard Susskind, Future of the Professions, How slow loading websites can affect sales: N Patel, ‘How Loading Time Affects Your Bottom Line’ blog.kissmetrics.com/loading-time/ and R Whittington, ‘Is A Slow Website Costing You Sales?’ rickwhittington.com/blog/is-a-slow-website-costing-you-sales/, both accessed 9 May 2017. Head to https://www.checklistlegal.com/podcast for show notes, resources links, and templates. Music: 'Sway this way' by @SilentPartner"
En este episodio analizamos junto con Ximena Castrillon y Jose Torres las predicciones de Richard Susskind para el mundo legal.
En este episodio analizamos junto con Ximena Castrillon y Jose Torres las predicciones de Richard Susskind para el mundo legal.
For more than three decades, Richard Susskind has been one of the profession’s most prolific voices in support of implementing technology with legal services delivery. The author of more than 10 books on the topic, his next one will focus on technology in the courtroom. “A better way of running state-based dispute resolution is largely using technology, rather than using traditional methods,” says Susskind. “Rather than hiring a lawyer, one might instead have an online dialogue with the other party and a judge and resolve a dispute more rapidly.”
For more than three decades, Richard Susskind has been one of the profession’s most prolific voices in support of implementing technology with legal services delivery. The author of more than 10 books on the topic, his next one will focus on technology in the courtroom. “A better way of running state-based dispute resolution is largely using technology, rather than using traditional methods,” says Susskind. “Rather than hiring a lawyer, one might instead have an online dialogue with the other party and a judge and resolve a dispute more rapidly.”
Alan S. Inouye heads public policy for the American Library Association (ALA). In this role, Alan leads ALA's technology policy portfolio ranging from telecommunications to copyright and licensing, to advance the ability of libraries to contribute to the economic, educational, cultural, and social well-being of America's communities. Alan is a recognized expert in national technology policy, published in various outlets such as The Hill, Roll Call, and the Christian Science Monitor. He serves on advisory boards or committees of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the U.S. State Department, Library For All, and the University of Maryland. From 2004 to 2007, Dr. Inouye served as the Coordinator of the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC) in the Executive Office of the President. At PITAC (now merged into the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology—PCAST), he oversaw the development of reports on cybersecurity, computational science, and other topics. Prior to PITAC, Alan served as a study director at the National Academy of Sciences. A number of his major studies culminated in book-length reports; three of these are LC21: A Digital Strategy for the Library of Congress, The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual Property in the Information Age, and Beyond Productivity: Information Technology, Innovation, and Creativity. Dr. Inouye began his career in the computer industry in Silicon Valley. He worked as a computer programmer for Atari, a statistician for Verbatim, and a manager of information systems for Amdahl (now Fujitsu). Alan completed his Ph.D. at the University of California at Berkeley and earned three master's degrees, in business administration (finance), systems engineering, and computer systems. In this episode, we discussed: the role of libraries in creating opportunities. library resources for entrepreneurs. how libraries and the incoming Tump administration might align on tech policy. Resources: American Library Association's Office for Information Technology Policy The Future of the Professions: How Technology will Transform the Work of Human Experts by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind NEWS ROUNDUP What a mess. The CIA has officially concluded that Russia hacked the 2016 presidential election not just to undermine voter confidence, but to get Donald Trump elected. This is according to a widely reported secret assessment conducted by the agency. The FBI on the her hand, isn't going that far. The FBI acknowledges that Russia did something--it's just saying it's not clear about Russia's motive: it thinks Russia carried out the intrusions for a mix of different reasons. The National Security Agency is due to release its own findings in the coming weeks before the election. The investigation is getting bi-partisan support from Chuck Schumer and Democrats, but it is also getting support from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Paul Ryan, as well as John McCain and Lindsey Graham. Here's what we know. We know the Director of the FBI, James Comey, sent a letter to Congress 11 days before the election saying more of Hillary Clinton's emails found on Anthony Weiner's computer could lead to a new investigation. Of course, that inquiry was dropped after a few days but, by then, the damage had already been done. Outging Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid is calling for a Congressional investigation of Comey. We know Trump said many times that the election was rigged. We know that Trump called on Russia during the campaign season to leak Hillary Clinton's emails. And now, Trump wants to appoint ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson, whom the Wall Street Journal reports has close ties to Russia. We also now know that hackers got into the Republican National Committee's servers as well but, for whatever reason, only the DNC's emails were released to the public. Trump and others on his transition team called the CIA's conclusions "ridiculous". Ridiculous or not, whether those advocating to get 37 Electors to change their votes in favor of Hillary Clinton win or not, this isn't going away. The electoral system of the country that prides itself on being the greatest democracy the world has ever seen, has been, according to the CIA, hacked to favor a particular candidate. And that particular candidate, by the name of Donald J. Trump, won. He won! This is is crisis mode. --- Andrea Wong reports in Bloomberg that Apple is taking advantage of a massive tax loophole that allows it to earn free money from American taxpayers without paying any taxes. The loophole lets Apple stash its foreign earnings, untaxed, overseas, and then use the money to buy U.S. bonds. The Washington Post reports that this has yielded Apple some $600 million in payments from the U.S. Treasury over the last 5 years. -- The Wall Street Journal reported that the State of Georgia allegedly sent a letter to the Department of Homeland Security accusing the agency of attempting to hack the state's voter database. The State of Georgia opposes Federal efforts to declare election systems critical infrastructure, which would enable more robust federal monitoring for cyberattacks. -- USA Today reports that the Trump transition team has scheduled a meeting with the tech sector for Wednesday, December 14th in New York City. Should be interesting since most of the tech sector essentially opposed Donald Trump during the campaign, with the exception of Peter Thiel who now sits on President-elect Trump's transition team. Interestingly, Google has posted a job posting for a conservative outreach manager. e -- Microsoft, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube are partnering to weed on content posted by terrorists. The companies will be creating a shared database that will included "hashes" or digital encoding or fingerprints, which will enable the companies to alert each other as to the offensive content. Each company will retain the power to make decisions for themselves as to whether to take down the content. - The White House has announced further investments in science, technology, engineering and math education in 2017. The National Science Foundation will spend $20 million in addition to the $25 million it spent in 2016. Ali Breland has the story in The Hill. -- John Horrigan at Pew released survey results last week showing those who lack access to smartphones, broadband and tablets actually report more stress and lack of confidence accessing information than those who have access to the technologies. Conventionally, we tend to think of having all of these devices at our constant disposal as the contributing factor to information overload. -- Finally, the FCC set letters to Verizon and AT&T about their so-called zero-rating practices. With zero rating, multichannel video providers select which programming their customers will have access to without it counting against their data caps. Net neutrality advocates argue this is a Trojan horse against the net neutrality rules, allowing the companies to prioritize the content they choose over competing content. Colin Gibbs has the story at Fierce Wireless.
Welcome to the Improv is No Joke podcast. Today’s guest is Bill Sheridan, the Maryland Association of CPAs’ Chief Communications Officer, editor, and resident social media cheerleader. He is creator and co-author of the association’s acclaimed blog, CPA Success; Certified Association Executive and thought leader at the Business Learning Institute; and manager of the association’s numerous social networks. Today we’re talking about what Bill sees on the horizon for information and technology, and how CPAs and other business professionals will need to adapt as technology changes. “I see a lot of change. It's going to get crazy, and it's going to get crazy really, really fast.” In 1965, Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, observed that the number of transistors per square inch on integrated circuits had doubled every year since their invention – or, more simply, the processing speed of computer technology is doubling every year. This observation is called Moore’s Law, and 51 years later it still holds true. “It's doing more than giving us really cool gadgets to play with. It's fundamentally changing everything.” Moore’s Law suggests that computer technology experiences exponential growth, which can be hard to comprehend. In The Future of Professions by Daniel & Richard Susskind, they illustrate exponential growth with a simple mental exercise: imagine folding a piece of paper in half over and over and over again (it’s not actually possible to fold a piece of paper more than a few times, but this exercise gives you an idea of what exponential growth looks like). 4 folds = thickness of a credit card 11 folds = thickness of a soda can 21 folds = taller than Big Ben 31 folds = tall enough to reach outer space 43 folds = tall enough to reach the Moon 100 folds = thickness of 8 billion light years “Things are are changing radically, and they're changing for CPA's as well.” CPAs will have to come to terms the fact that computers will outperform them on some tasks, but nothing will change the fact that people will still need accounting services. CPAs need to adapt to new technology and clients’ changing needs, and if you don’t adapt then the generation below you will – so you’ll still be out of a job. The profession will still exist, but CPAs will need entirely new, adaptable skillsets. CPAs will need to be better improvisers. “I'm not here to tell anybody that you have to do this stuff, because you don't, but you also don't have to stay in business.” The young professionals who are going to be leading the CPA profession in a very short period of time are completely comfortable with moving from new technology to new technology, because that's just the way life is for them. The pushback from the old guard is fine and it's not unexpected, and very soon the accounting profession is going to shift to something that's much more capable of embracing new things, just because of the shift in leadership. “If we can get there first, if we can figure out how to become a little bit more future ready and then show our clients and customers how to do that as well, then our role as trusted business advisors just gets stronger.” As Chief Communications Officer, Bill’s philosophy is that the MACPAs needs to be wherever their members are and reach them in whatever way that they like to be reached, and they try to do that across all of the different platforms. By reaching out to their audience and adding value to their social media experience, Bill helps the MACPAs maintain their role as trusted business advisors when information is more available than ever. At CPA Success they write about what members of the MACPA need to know today – breaking news, new standards, etc. At the Business Learning Institute they focus on what might be happening down the road that they should be paying attention to. Similarly, they shared important news on their Twitter feed and engage more personally with their clients on Facebook. I always enjoy sitting down to talk with Bill, and I greatly appreciate him taking the time out of his busy schedule. We’re going to touch bases again on the podcast, in about a year, to see how technology is changing and discuss how we have adapted. Resources: Follow the CPA Success blog Get educated with the Business Learning Institute The Future of Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts by Daniel Susskind & Richard Susskind A More Beautiful Question by Warren Berger The Second Machine Age by Andrew McAfee and Erik Brynjolfsson Humans are Underrated by Geoffrey Colvin Production & Development for Improv is no Joke by Podcast Masters Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, Microsoft's rampant & silly AI, Google phones home, the Apple/FBI fight is over, Microsoft's Build conference 2016, the smallest cell created, a 3D printed sonograph ...All this and more on The Drill Down. Headlines Microsoft deletes 'teen girl' AI after it became a Hitler-loving sex robot within 24 hours Google unveils Fiber Phone, a $10/month home phone service coming to all Fiber cities A Lot Riding on Tesla's Model 3 Unveiling Audible Book of the Week The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts by Richard Susskind, Daniel Susskind Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: Bunsen Burner by Ben Salisbury & Geoff Barrow/CUTS (from 'Ex Machina') Hot Topic Apple's San Bernardino fight is officially over as government confirms working attack FBI Accessed San Bernardino Shooter's iPhone Without Apple, Drops Litigation The most important announcements from Microsoft Build 2016 Windows 10 Anniversary Update Windows Ink Facebook integration Ubuntu Bash Hololens ships Bot SDK & Directory Music Break: Battlestar Galactica by Bear McCreary Final Word Scientists Build A Live, No-Frills Cell That Could Have A Big Future The Drill Down Video of the Week 3D Printing: Meeting Murilo Update/Addendum FBI agrees to help Arkansas prosecutors open iPhone after hack of San Bernardino device Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Box product manager Tosin Onafowokan.
Josh Block and Casey Sullivan discuss deferred prosecution agreements in the Dewey & LeBoeuf criminal case, the end of Dickstein Shapiro, Justice Scalia's Big Law associate days, Richard Susskind's new book and op-ed video, and the one year anniversary of the launch of the Big Law Business website. Brought to you by: Bloomberg Law http://www.bna.com/bloomberglaw?promocode=BLBBLAW Discussed in this episode: Ex-Dewey Client-Relations Manager Strikes Deal to Avoid Trial https://bol.bna.com/ex-dewey-client-relations-manager-strikes-deal-to-avoid-trial/ Former Dickstein Shapiro Chair Reflects on Demise, Blames Media https://bol.bna.com/former-dickstein-shapiro-chair-reflects-on-demise-blames-media/ Prominent SCOTUS Lawyer Reflects on the Death of Scalia https://bol.bna.com/prominent-scotus-lawyer-reflects-on-the-death-of-scalia/ Scalia's Six-Year Stint as a Big Law Associate https://bol.bna.com/scalias-six-year-stint-as-a-big-law-associate/ Susskind: As Legal Work Decomposes Will Law Firms ‘Break Rank?' https://bol.bna.com/as-legal-work-decomposes-will-law-firms-break-rank/
In an era when machines can out-perform human beings at most tasks what are the prospects for employment? In an era when machines can out-perform human beings at most tasks, what are the prospects for employment, who should own and control online expertise, and what tasks should be reserved exclusively for people? The Future of the Professions predicts the decline of today's professions and describes the people and systems that will replace them. In an Internet society, according to Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind, we will neither need nor want doctors, teachers, accountants, architects, the clergy, consultants, lawyers, and many others, to work as they did in the 20th century. The authors Richard Susskind OBE (Author, speaker, and independent adviser) and Daniel Susskind (Lecturer in Economics, Balliol College, University of Oxford) explore these questions with Joshua Hordern (Associate Professor of Christian Ethics, Oxford Healthcare Values Partnership), Vili Lehdonvirta (Research Fellow, Oxford Internet Institute) and Judy Wajcman (Anthony Giddens Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics). Chaired by Kathryn Eccles (Research Fellow, Oxford Internet Institute and Digital Humanities Champion, Humanities Division, University of Oxford).
In an era when machines can out-perform human beings at most tasks what are the prospects for employment? In an era when machines can out-perform human beings at most tasks, what are the prospects for employment, who should own and control online expertise, and what tasks should be reserved exclusively for people? The Future of the Professions predicts the decline of today's professions and describes the people and systems that will replace them. In an Internet society, according to Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind, we will neither need nor want doctors, teachers, accountants, architects, the clergy, consultants, lawyers, and many others, to work as they did in the 20th century. The authors Richard Susskind OBE (Author, speaker, and independent adviser) and Daniel Susskind (Lecturer in Economics, Balliol College, University of Oxford) explore these questions with Joshua Hordern (Associate Professor of Christian Ethics, Oxford Healthcare Values Partnership), Vili Lehdonvirta (Research Fellow, Oxford Internet Institute) and Judy Wajcman (Anthony Giddens Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics). Chaired by Kathryn Eccles (Research Fellow, Oxford Internet Institute and Digital Humanities Champion, Humanities Division, University of Oxford).
“The question is not can a machine exhibit empathy or judgement but instead for what problems are empathy, judgement, or creativity the solution?” -Richard Susskind After years of writing and thinking about the future of the legal profession, Richard Susskind began to run into legal professionals whose careers are being affected by technology. In addition to lawyers, those in the medical, architecture, financial, and other fields have begun to notice a shift in the provision of professional services. Richard got together with his son, Daniel Susskind, at the time working in justice policy, education policy, and health policy for the British Prime Minister, to examine how technology is increasingly playing a fundamental role in how all service-based professions work. They recently published a book on the subject called “The Future of the Professions.” In this episode of The Digital Edge, Sharon Nelson and Jim Calloway interview Richard and Daniel Susskind about their new book and key topics within that might interest lawyers who wish to prepare for the future. They discuss a “grand bargain” concept of exclusivity, the capability of machines to replace cognitive, physical/manual, and emotional skills currently provided by human professionals, and the right questions to ask about the future of legal services. Are there any tasks that computers won't be able to do? Topics include: Society's expectation for affordable, accessible, and reliable professional services Computers and artificial intelligence as a threat to the legal profession Professionals to be redeployed into new roles Embedded knowledge Free sharing of information through online avenues Incremental changes versus complete changes Commercial and social circumstances of the current systems Professor Richard Susskind is an author, speaker, and independent advisor to international professional firms and national governments. He is president for the Society for Computers and Law, IT advisor to the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, and chair of the Oxford Internet Institute Advisory Board. His books include the best sellers, “The End of Lawyers?” and “Tomorrow's Lawyers.” Daniel Susskind is a lecturer in economics at Balliol College, University of Oxford, where he researches and teaches, and from where he has two degrees in economics. He was also a Kennedy Scholar at Harvard University. Previously, he worked for the British government as a policy adviser in the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit and as a senior policy adviser at the Cabinet Office. Special thanks to our sponsors, ServeNow and CloudMask.
As technology continues to rapidly advance, not only are law firms and solo practices changing, but the justice system itself will embrace convenient technological solutions. Many lawyers are worried about the future of the legal profession and, more importantly, their jobs. While at The Florida Bar 2015 Annual Convention, Adriana Linares interviews keynote speaker Richard Susskind about technology and the future of the justice system, specific ideas he has about legal risk management and solutions, and what he recommends lawyers do today to avoid falling behind the curve. Richard Susskind analyzes, writes, and speaks often about how technology changes the way the law works. He has published several books including The End of Lawyers?, Tomorrow’s Lawyers, and The Future of the Professions, which is being released this year.
Former Legal Talk Network host and Fellow at CodeX Monica Bay interview keynote speaker Richard Susskind at the 2015 ABA National Summit on Innovation in Legal Services. Susskind discusses using technology for dispute resolution and containment. For example, he describes a project he’s working on in Wales that uses online dispute resolution techniques for mediation, negotiation, and even judicial decisions. Tune in to hear his specific suggestions for a three-tiered system of internet resources for legal issues, completely redefining the role of the state in resolution. Richard Susskind is a well-known lawyer and legal technology innovator. He advises major law firms and in-house counsel on technological solutions. Additionally, Susskind writes books and speaks on the future of legal services and technology.
The Digital Edge host Jim Calloway interviews Law Practice Magazine Editor-in-Chief John Bowers at the 2014 American Bar Association Law Practice Division Fall Meeting. Bowers gives examples of top themes covered such as data security and work/life balance, his favorite articles including one with Richard Susskind, and how lawyers and other legal professionals can subscribe to the magazine in print, online, or through the Law Practice App. John Bowers works with lawyers in business development and marketing. He was previously the editor-in-chief of the Law Practice Division's Webzine and has been working with the division since 2006.
Joshua Lenon, lawyer and resident to Clio, interviews Professor Richard Susskind after his keynote address at the 2014 Clio Cloud Conference. Susskind discusses how technology and collaboration benefit small law firms and businesses adopting a multidisciplinary approach to problem solving. Richard Susskind is an author, speaker, and advisor to various firms, governments, and in-house legal departments around the world.
If you like the idea of the above equation, well, you are either looking forward to a Robot vs. Lawyer stand-off, or, like today’s guest, you simply believe that law can be made better and more efficient through the use of software and applications to streamline repetitive legal tasks. Richard Susskind is the IT adviser to the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, and author of the recently published (and provocatively titled) The End of Lawyers? Rethinking the Nature of Legal Services. He recently sat down with the Berkman Center’s Brock Rutter to chat about how technology might be able to simultaneously make the work of lawyers more efficient, reduce overhead costs, and improve access to justice. The Reference Section: • Follow Richard’s work • Watch Richard’s recent talk at the Berkman Center’s Law Lab • The recent NYTimes article on the firm that did away with its lawyers CC-licensed music this week: Arslkhan: “Love Odyssey” Coconut Monkeyrocket: “Accidental Beatnik”
Andrew Marr talks to the human rights lawyer, Peter Harris, who represented the ANC when apartheid in South Africa was at its height. He discusses how the law was always seen to be done, even when justice was denied. Richard Susskind wants to revolutionise the justice system: as the new President of the Society for Computers and Law he sees technology as the answer to today's problems. Australia has been the recent victim of natural disasters - floods, storms and wild fires - and the country's leading conservationist, Tim Flannery, puts forward his views on the future of the planet. And as the longest running study of elephants in the wild turns 40, Phyllis Lee, explains what they've learnt about, what John Donne called, "Nature's great masterpiece". Producer: Katy Hickman.
International Institute for Conflict Prevention & Resolution
In the second of a two-part discussion, U.K. author Richard Susskind visits International Dispute Negotiation host Michael McIlwrath to discuss managing law firms and corporate law departments, technology, and the billable hour.
International Institute for Conflict Prevention & Resolution
In the first of two parts, U.K. author Richard Susskind visits Mike McIlwrath and International Dispute Negotiation to discuss his unique view of systemic shifts in legal management.
I spoke with Joy Heath Rush, the Enterprise Multimedia Manager at Sidley Austin LLP in Chicago and the President of the seven-member board of directors for the International Legal Technology Association about the upcoming ILTA annual conference, which she described as "the number one venue for peer networking for people who are professionals in legal technology and unmatched educational sessions." Among other interesting initiatives, there will be ILTA TV and additional early morning super sessions ("extra keynote sessions"), including one by Richard Susskind, author of The End of Lawyers? Rethinking the Nature of Legal Services (Oxford University Press, 2009).
I spoke with Joy Heath Rush, the Enterprise Multimedia Manager at Sidley Austin LLP in Chicago and the President of the seven-member board of directors for the International Legal Technology Association about the upcoming ILTA annual conference, which she described as "the number one venue for peer networking for people who are professionals in legal technology and unmatched educational sessions." Among other interesting initiatives, there will be ILTA TV and additional early morning super sessions ("extra keynote sessions"), including one by Richard Susskind, author of The End of Lawyers? Rethinking the Nature of Legal Services (Oxford University Press, 2009).
I spoke with Joy Heath Rush, the Enterprise Multimedia Manager at Sidley Austin LLP in Chicago and the President of the seven-member board of directors for the International Legal Technology Association about the upcoming ILTA annual conference, which she described as "the number one venue for peer networking for people who are professionals in legal technology and unmatched educational sessions." Among other interesting initiatives, there will be ILTA TV and additional early morning super sessions ("extra keynote sessions"), including one by Richard Susskind, author of The End of Lawyers? Rethinking the Nature of Legal Services (Oxford University Press, 2009).
Gresham Professor of law, Richard Susskind welcomes some of the finest legal minds to Barnards Inn Hall for an intimate discussionon a wide variety of topics. Each lecture is a unique insight into the mechanincs and philosophy that run underneath British Law.Charles Leslie Falconer, Baron Falconer of Thoroton, PC, QC (born 19 November 1951) is a British Labour politician and barrister.Falconer became the Lord Chancellor and the first Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs in 2003 under Prime Minister Tony Blair, and would go on to become the first Secretary of State for Justice in a 2007 reorganization and enlargement of the portfolio of the Department for Constitutional Affairs.
Richard Susskind welcomes Baroness Elizabeth Butler-Sloss. She was the first female Lord Justice of Appeal and, until 2004, was the highest-ranking female judge in the United Kingdom. Until June 2007, she chaired the inquests into the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales, and Dodi Fayed. She stood down from that task with effect from that date, and the inquest was conducted by Lord Justice Scott Baker.Professor Susskind and Baroness Butler-Slosstalks through her work within family law, which touches on everything from divorce to competnecy hearing in medical cases.