The actor and well-known personality Rob Lowe took the keynote stage at LegalWeek 2025 yesterday (March 26) for a roughly 45-minute interview with ALM’s Gina Passarella, editor-in-chief of The American Lawyer. Lowe is not just an actor—he’s also a producer, director, and author. The keynote was entitled The Art of Reinvention: Turning Setbacks into Stepping Stones.

Lowe was engaging, funny, and full of colorful stories and anecdotes. Turns out, he’s a pretty good storyteller by the way. That said, there was little in his talk that directly touched on law or legal tech—aside from the fact that his 86-year-old father is a practicing lawyer in Dayton, Ohio.

Continue Reading To Be or Not To Be: LegalTech Conference Keynotes, the Eternal Debate

I attended an interesting panel discussion at the opening day at LegalWeek 2025. The presentation was called Do My Eyes Deceive Me? GenAI Hallucinations in Legal Research Citation Tools. The presentation was put on by AALL and the panelists were all law librarians — Anna Russell from Cornell, Diana Koppang from Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg, Mandy Lee from Seton Hall, and Paul Callister from the University of Missouri.

Let me say up front: law librarians are some of the most trustworthy and practical voices when it comes to evaluating how GenAI—and, for that matter, other technologies—are actually functioning for legal research. They know how to ask better questions and look at a problem from every angle — something many lawyers don’t do or are not good at.

Continue Reading Law Librarians to Lawyers: Read the Cases. Critically. Carefully

The next two weeks will be heaven for legal tech enthusiasts: LegalWeek and ABA TechShow will both happen between March 24 and April 5.

LegalWeek 2025, the glitzy New York legal tech shows kicks off this week. It’s one of the biggest legal tech events and is geared toward big law though perhaps not exclusively. It’s put on annually by ALM. It’s appropriate the Show is always in the Big Apple. Everything about LegalWeek is big.

The conference typically draws over 6,000 attendees from around the world, including legal professionals—law firm partners, general counsel, legal operations leaders, IT professionals, legal tech vendors, and consultants. It’s one of the largest legal tech conferences.

It’s been hosted annually at the New York Hilton Midtown since the early 80s.  In recent years, the educational programming foscuses high level thought leadership across several key areas, cybersecuity, data privacy access to justice, and—of course—AI. Networking will be big, as always.

Continue Reading LegalWeek 2025 Kicks Off This Week: Big Law, Big Tech, Big Parties and Big Crowds

While at SXSW I heard the results of a survey of rural residents by Mother. The data and research reveal interesting factors driving those living in rural areas. The sense of community, the values, the nature of creativity, and their aspirations all need to be taken into account in trying to solve the legal desert in rural areas.  Here’s my post on the issue for Above the Law.

There’s a concept in public speaking called the informed audicence. It means your audience should inform how you convey your message. In giving presentations to lawyers about Gen AI, presenters should focus on not only on the risks but on the benefits. And give practical demonstrations. A SXSW presentation drove these points home. Here’s my post for Above the Law on this point.

Here’s my post for Above the Law on lessons for litigators from SXSW panels on live theatre and marketing: start with the story and not with the technology, help you audicence experiance the story, don’t just tell them use data and AI to learn more about how to tailor arguments to individual decision makers, establish an emotional connection between your clients and witnesses with decision makers and make it personal

Here is my post for Above the Law about the Emerging Trends Report presented by Amy Webb of Future Today Strategy Group at SXSW last week.  The so what for legal? Don’t fixate on obstacles but anticipate the changes that will be occurring. And ask the right “what if” questions.

Meredith Whittaker, CEO of Signal, presented a chilling picture of the modern privacy landscape at a SXSW session. Data proliferation and AI tools are combining to seriously threaten everyone’s privacy. But the awareness level among lawyers and legal professionals may not be where it should be. Legal professionals need to be aware of these threats to protect confidential information and to advise their clients appropriately. Here is my post for Above the Law about this presentation and the threats.

Here’s my post for Above the Law on the key takeaways from the MIT Study for legal presented at SXSW: small language models can and will do a lot for law firms and legal departments, legal needs to take a problem first approach to legal tech and its applications and AI agents are still a work in progress. The big takeaway though:the future isn’t just about adopting new technology—it’s about strategically applying it to solve the right problems

Here is my article for Above the Law on the opening SXSW Keynote last Friday by social health expert Kasley Killiam on the mental and physical benefits of and need for greater social connections But that’s not why most law firms are demanding a return to the office by younger lawyers. If firms want to enhance collaboration and improve morale and productivity, they need to give younger lawyers a reason to be in office.