Technology,
Law Practice
Sep. 11, 2020
Autonomous levels of artificial intelligence as applied to the law
A new framework identifies the autonomous levels of AI legal reasoning and provides a much-needed means of comparing advances in AI-powered legal tech products along with gauging overall progress in the ongoing application of AI to the law.





Lance Eliot
Chief AI Scientist
Techbrium Inc.
Dr. Lance B. Eliot is a Stanford Fellow and a world-renowned expert on Artificial Intelligence (AI) and the Law with over 6.8+ million amassed views of his AI columns. As a seasoned executive and high-tech entrepreneur, he combines practical industry experience with deep academic research and serves as a Stanford Fellow at Stanford University.
The famous management guru, Peter Drucker, exhorted repeatedly that you cannot manage that which you do not measure. This maxim can be readily harnessed for the advent of artificial intelligence as applied to the law, revealing a twofold existent conundrum consisting of both failing to measure and the equally beguiling existential absence of a measuring stick to begin with.
Let's mindfully consider the matter and then explore a new f...
For only $95 a month (the price of 2 article purchases)
Receive unlimited article access and full access to our archives,
Daily Appellate Report, award winning columns, and our
Verdicts and Settlements.
Or
$795 for an entire year!
Or access this article for $45
(Purchase provides 7-day access to this article. Printing, posting or downloading is not allowed.)
Already a subscriber?
Sign In