Why It Matters
The demo illustrates how legal AI is moving from standalone drafting tools toward integrated platforms that ingest firm data, pull authoritative external law, and produce court-ready, auditable outputs—potentially speeding litigation and due diligence while improving defensibility. Firms evaluating legal tech should weigh data integration, source transparency, and multi-model orchestration when selecting AI vendors.
Summary
Legal Tech Hub’s May Demo Dozen showcased 13 short vendor demos, opening with Harvey, a unified legal AI platform that combines large local document vaults, enterprise DMS integrations and external legal databases like Lexis into a single workspace. Harvey demonstrated 'vault projects' capable of ingesting up to 100,000 files or 100GB, long-horizon agents that orchestrate multi-step tasks, and multi-model routing across leading LLMs to draft fully sourced legal outputs. The presenter highlighted sentence-level citations to both underlying documents and case law, automatic generation of editable deliverables (including PPTX), and international knowledge-source connectivity. Organizers said the series will expand timings and audience-focused sessions for different firm sizes and in-house teams, with the next event on June 24.
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