
The Brazilian Senate launched an artificial‑intelligence platform that automatically matches citizen proposals from the e‑Cidadania database with draft legislation. Unlike the previous system, the tool surfaces ideas even when they lack the traditional endorsement threshold, allowing consultants to embed public input directly into bill texts. Its first application appeared in Bill 6,125/2025, incorporating a proposal for free psychological care for children of domestic‑violence victims. The system aims to turn an underused archive into a continuous source of policy insight.

On February 12, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration revoked nine electronic logging devices—GTS ELD, UTruckin, ELD365 ELOG, Ironman ELD, Factor ELD, and four AirELD versions—after they failed to meet Title 49 CFR technical standards. Motor carriers have a 60‑day...

The article explains how litigants highlight “circuit splits” in petitions for Supreme Court review. It defines clean versus messy splits and percolating versus persistent splits, showing which types attract the Court’s attention. The Court prefers clear, evolving disagreements that can...

Legal AI adoption is accelerating, but many firms see pilots stall in production. Errol Rodericks of Denodo explained that the root cause is untrusted, fragmented data rather than weak models. Law firms rely on disparate systems lacking enterprise‑wide governance, forcing...

The 39th annual survey on choice of law in American courts has been published on SSRN, cataloguing the most consequential 2025 decisions on choice of law, party autonomy, extraterritoriality, international human rights, sovereign immunity, jurisdiction, and foreign‑judgment enforcement. Highlights include...

In this episode, the hosts examine ICE’s expanding surveillance apparatus, highlighting recent reports of AI-driven errors, school‑camera collaborations, and the revocation of a Global Entry after facial‑scan detection. They also discuss the broader privacy concerns surrounding doorbell cameras and Iran’s...

The European Law Institute (ELI) released its project report titled “Enhancing Child Protection,” offering constructive amendments to the European Commission’s 2022 Parenthood Proposal (COM/2022/695). The report aims to align the draft regulation more closely with the EU acquis, prioritize the...

Meta’s Ray‑Ban smart glasses, equipped with a hidden camera, have sparked a viral TikTok sensation after a Manhattan restaurant patron was recorded without consent. The clip amassed over two million views, turning an ordinary dining experience into an unintended internet...
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has long regulated prediction markets, but a wave of state lawsuits is challenging its authority. Nearly 50 cases across the U.S. allege that event contracts offered by platforms like Kalshi, Polymarket, Coinbase and Crypto.com...
Congresswoman Maxine Waters, top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, publicly challenged SEC Chair Paul Atkins during a Feb. 11 hearing, accusing the agency of prioritizing Wall Street and billionaires over ordinary investors. She highlighted that the SEC currently has...
The SEC has filed at least ten complaints in the past year accusing defendants of running Ponzi‑style affinity fraud schemes that target religious, cultural or ethnic groups. This volume mirrors the enforcement activity seen during the final year of Chairman...
The EU will introduce a unified anti‑money‑laundering regulation (AMLR) and the sixth AML directive on July 10 2027, replacing the patchwork of national transpositions of the fifth directive. Until then, companies must continue to meet divergent local UBO reporting and due‑diligence rules...

Barcan+Kirby, a South West UK law firm, has rolled out Legl’s client intelligence and lifecycle management platform across the entire organization. The solution delivers firm‑branded, client‑facing workflows for identity verification, form submission and e‑signatures, while automating AML and regulatory compliance...

Plaintiff law firms are adopting modern portfolio theory to treat their dockets like investment portfolios, using AI‑driven analytics to diversify case mix across timing, value, practice area, and confidence levels. By leveraging predictive cash‑flow models and large data sets, firms...
Digital health firms in 2026 face a sharp tension between accelerating AI capabilities and tightening data regulations across the UK and EU. Hyper‑personalised care, driven by wearables and AI‑powered NHS apps, promises better outcomes but raises compliance challenges. New frameworks...

The newly revised English Arbitration Act 2025 eliminates the implied choice of law for arbitration agreements, mandating an explicit choice or defaulting to the seat’s law. This marks a departure from the established three‑step test—express choice, implied choice, then closest...

Brazil’s Executive Branch has submitted a Draft General Law on Private International Law, aiming to modernize the country’s conflict‑of‑laws rules. The bill harmonises court and arbitration regimes by explicitly allowing parties to select the governing law of international contracts and...
A British Airways passenger successfully claimed £520 compensation after the airline cited a tropical storm in Nassau as an “extraordinary circumstance” to deny liability. The passenger appealed to an independent arbitrator, who ruled that BA had not demonstrated that it...

The episode critiques the American Constitution Society (ACS) for lacking a coherent constitutional theory beyond opposing Trump and originalism, highlighting President Phil Brest’s admission that the organization has no affirmative interpretive framework. It references Jeffrey Toobin’s NYT column exposing the...
The Trump Justice Department suffered a high‑profile loss when senior counsel Kathy Ruemmler resigned after a federal judge labeled the workplace abusive. The resignation follows a court order compelling the administration to restore slavery exhibits at the President’s House, underscoring...

The CJEU’s judgment in HUK‑COBURG II examined whether Bulgaria’s Article 52 of the ZZD can be treated as an overriding mandatory rule under Rome II. The Court introduced a “sufficient connexion” test, requiring a close link between the facts and the forum before...

The episode examines recent federal and California court rulings on whether participation in California’s Safe at Home confidentiality program entitles litigants to retroactively redact or pseudonymize past federal filings. Judge Birotte’s decision in Smith v. Solomon underscores that federal courts...

Law librarians hosted a tabling event to introduce students to emerging legal AI tools such as Lexis Protégé and Westlaw Deep Research, encountering both enthusiasm and skepticism. They used live demonstrations, clear disclaimers about court and academic rules, and a neutral...

The article advocates a case‑driven, tool‑agnostic approach to mobile and cloud forensics, emphasizing that no single platform can address every device type, operating‑system version, or legal requirement. It outlines how forensic tool selection should be based on device characteristics, data...

The SEC charged Archer‑Daniels‑Midland (ADM) and three former executives with accounting and disclosure fraud, culminating in a landmark 2026 enforcement action. ADM was found to have materially overstated its nutrition segment by recording intersegment transactions on non‑market terms, inflating profitability....

Voting has closed and fifteen legal‑tech startups were selected as finalists for the 2026 Startup Alley at ABA TECHSHOW in Chicago. The finalists will compete in an opening‑night pitch, with the winner receiving a marketing prize package, while all receive...

The South African legal market is shifting from traditional lockstep firms to a gig‑economy model, propelled by AI agents and alternative legal service providers. Lawyers are moving to merit‑based pay and using platforms like Umbiie.com to serve international clients, while...
KLM has stopped providing a timeline for fully restoring its Dubai and Tel Aviv services, continuing to operate only a reduced schedule that favors morning flights while cancelling most afternoon and evening rotations. The airline resumed full operations to Saudi...

The Southern District of New York dismissed a copyright infringement claim against Twitter user Perry after finding his tweet‑embedded screenshot qualified as fair use. Perry’s tweet juxtaposed a Forbes 30 Under 30 profile with a still from a pornographic video...
The D.C. Circuit upheld FERC’s 2024 decision allowing PJM to exclude energy‑efficiency resources from future capacity auctions, finding the rule forward‑looking rather than retroactive. A dissent warned that the change undermines reliance interests for providers like Affirmed Energy. In a...
The UK government plans to embed Henry VIII powers in the Children Wellbeing and Schools Bill, enabling a rapid ban on social media for under‑16s via statutory instrument. Simultaneously, it will broaden mandatory age‑verification for social media, VPNs and AI chatbots,...

South African law firms face steep financial and reputational losses from IT downtime, with a single hour costing an average R360,000 for a 20‑person practice and up to R6.5 million for larger firms. The article distinguishes disaster recovery (DR) from simple...
Law schools with leading environmental law programs, notably Columbia’s Sabin Center and NYU’s climate fellowship, are facing a coordinated assault by right‑wing state attorneys general. The campaign includes congressional demands for investigations of senior staff, House Oversight probes, and aggressive...

The Supreme Court will hear Sripetch v. SEC in April, a case that challenges whether the SEC must demonstrate actual pecuniary loss to obtain disgorgement orders. The dispute revisits the agency’s expanding use of equitable relief, which has evolved from...
David Fontana’s new article examines the entrenched concentration of senior federal officials in the Washington metropolitan area and how administrative law both empowers and restricts officials located elsewhere. He outlines the historical legitimacy challenges of a centralized bureaucracy and evaluates...
A Citi Institute report warns that a quantum‑enabled cyberattack on a top U.S. bank could jeopardize $2‑3.3 trillion of GDP, turning quantum computing from theory into an operational emergency. The article highlights the “harvest now, decrypt later” (HNDL) threat, where adversaries...

In December 2025, Mexican businessman Ramon Alexandro Rovirosa Martinez was found guilty in a U.S. bribery trial that featured no fact witnesses. The defense argues the government introduced inadmissible text messages and translations without proper certification, violating the Confrontation Clause....
Booking.com has removed two Hilton properties in the Frankfurt region from its platform, cancelling several hundred existing reservations. The hotels – Hilton Frankfurt City Centre and Hilton Frankfurt Gravenbruch – are owned by the Mashali family, linked to Iranian banker...

The episode examines a recent judicial reprimand of attorney Michael Policchio for filing briefs with fabricated, AI‑hallucinated citations, highlighting a broader pattern of similar errors in other cases. Judge Mark Dinsmore emphasizes that while technology can aid legal work, attorneys...
An Israeli civilian and an IDF reservist were indicted for allegedly exploiting classified military intelligence to place bets on the prediction‑market platform Polymarket. Authorities say the suspects used insider knowledge of operation timing to profit, prompting a joint Shin Bet, Defense...

A Senate‑staff report estimates that the Trump administration’s scaling back of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau cost U.S. consumers roughly $19 billion in lost relief. The agency’s enforcement slowdown, abandoned overdraft‑fee caps and a blocked credit‑card‑late‑fee rule account for the bulk...

The MHRA has opened a public consultation proposing that CE‑marked medical devices be recognised indefinitely in Great Britain. Around 90% of devices used in the GB market currently carry a CE mark, and the agency aims to align transition timelines...
AIIC Group, the legal firm consortium behind Taylor Rose, FDR Law and Kingsley Wood, has raised its ownership stake in home‑moving technology subsidiary SlothMove from 50% to 92%. The London‑based press release, dated 16 February 2026, frames the move as...

Doctrine, the Paris‑based legal AI platform, announced the acquisition of Spain’s Maite, its fifth deal in three years, expanding its customer base to 27,000 legal professionals across five European markets. The purchase adds a full suite of Spanish‑language AI drafting,...
Recent SEC enforcement actions have spotlighted ineffective internal controls over financial reporting, emphasizing approval workflow and reconciliation gaps. Experts argue that robust control environments, paired with knowledgeable teams, shift compliance from a reactive task to a predictable process. As organizations...
The SEC is sharpening its enforcement focus on core misconduct such as insider trading, accounting and disclosure fraud, market manipulation, and adviser fiduciary breaches. Chairman Gary Gensler, echoing Acting Director Sam Waldon, has directed staff away from low‑harm record‑keeping investigations....

The episode examines Epic Systems' recent courtroom setback in the CureIS litigation, focusing on the court's denial of a motion to stay discovery and the nuanced protective order regarding "Highly Confidential – Attorneys' Eyes Only" information. It highlights how Epic's...

The Texas district court granted BMW an anti‑suit injunction against Onesta’s German infringement suit, but the Federal Circuit stayed the order. The dispute centers on whether a US patent can be enforced in a foreign court, echoing the EU’s BSH...

Law strategy coach Tea Hoffman outlines five actionable steps for lawyers to become sought‑after speakers. She stresses the importance of carving out a distinctive niche, honing delivery through deliberate practice, and curating a professional online presence with video clips and...
The European Commission has released a draft Digital Networks Act, aiming to replace fragmented national telecom rules with a unified market framework. The legislation targets spectrum harmonisation and introduces perpetual licences to reduce regulatory uncertainty. By standardising rules, the EU...