All Content from Business Insider 11月11日 03:49
律所举办AI培训,助力律师拥抱变革
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美国第二大律所Latham & Watkins为其新入职的400多名律师举办了为期两天的AI学院培训。此次培训旨在让律师们了解并熟练使用人工智能工具,如Harvey和Microsoft Copilot,以应对客户对效率提升的需求。律所合伙人强调,AI是“一代人的机遇”,拥抱AI而非回避是必然趋势。培训也提醒律师们务必核查AI工具输出的准确性,确保工作成果的卓越。律所认为,AI将帮助律师们摆脱重复性工作,专注于更具战略性和吸引力的任务,从而提升客户服务水平。

⚖️ **拥抱AI,提升效率与服务:** Latham & Watkins将AI视为“一代人的机遇”,积极推动AI工具在律所的应用,以满足客户对更高效率和更优服务的需求。律所合伙人强调,拥抱AI是必然趋势,将帮助律所保持领先地位,并为客户提供更高效的服务。

🎓 **AI学院赋能新生代律师:** 律所为400多名一年级律师举办了强制性的AI学院培训,让他们了解并实践如Harvey和Microsoft Copilot等AI工具。此举旨在确保新一代律师能够熟练运用前沿技术,适应法律行业的变革。

⚠️ **准确性至关重要,警惕“幻觉”:** 培训中反复强调,尽管AI工具功能强大,但律师仍需对AI输出的内容进行严格审查和核实,以避免出现不准确信息,确保最终交付给客户的工作成果始终卓越。此前已有案例显示AI可能产生虚假信息。

🚀 **AI助力职业发展,而非取代:** 律所认为AI不会减少初级律师的机会,反而能让他们从繁琐的法律研究和文书工作中解放出来,专注于更具挑战性、更具战略意义的工作,从而提升职业价值和客户委托的深度。

America's second-largest law firm convened first-year associates for an AI Academy training.

The legal profession is facing disruption, and its newest recruits are on the front lines.

On Friday, Latham & Watkins packed its first-year associate class, more than 400 lawyers in total, into a Washington, D.C., hotel for a mandatory two-day "AI Academy." The firm laid out how partners already use tools like Harvey, an OpenAI-backed legal tech startup, and Microsoft Copilot. It also brought in outside voices, including Meta's top privacy lawyer, Steve Satterfield.

It was all a not-so-subtle cue that artificial intelligence isn't optional, but part of the firm's standard operating procedure. The Big Law firm hit $7 billion in revenue last year, making it the second-highest-grossing firm in the US, and employs over 3,500 lawyers globally.

Latham partner Michael Rubin, who represents tech clients in high-stakes litigation and regulatory fights, says the firm is eyeing AI as a "generational opportunity" to equip all of its lawyers with the most advanced tools and provide clients better, more efficient service.

"Turning away from it as opposed to embracing is just not an option," Rubin told Business Insider from Washington on Saturday. "We are going to run as fast as we can toward it."

Fears are growing that law firms will reduce their associate class sizes because of AI efficiencies.

The routine legal work often handed to associates — think legal research, citation checks, and first drafts — is exactly the type of task that firms can automate with software. The job-market anxiety is real. Many believe that law firms will need fewer associates to drive profits even higher, and in-house legal teams are already exploring ways to reduce head count.

The global firm is pitching a win-win. It trains associates to use the tools that boost revenue and client service, and those early-career lawyers stay relevant as the nature of their work changes.

Over the weekend, Rubin encouraged associates to seize the "powerful new tool" in their kit.

"It's a revolution that we're all experiencing," Rubin told Business Insider. "It doesn't change the fundamental point that at Latham, we provide the best client service and that means ensuring that the work product that goes out the door is always exceptional."

Proceed at your own risk

Across Big Law, client pressure has turned curiosity into urgency. In-house counsel want efficiency gains and are asking law firms about their AI plans. Firms are now racing to pilot and roll out software to automate mundane tasks. Results are mixed.

This spring, a Latham lawyer defending Anthropic in a copyright lawsuit made headlines after an expert's testimony cited an article that does not exist. The lawyer said the mistake stemmed from using Anthropic's own chatbot, Claude, which fabricated an article title and authors.

Adam Ziegler, who leads Latham's AI strategy, pushed firmwide adoption while also stressing the importance of personal responsibility. Lawyers are expected to "review the output of the tools they have" and to "keep their hands on the wheel," Ziegler told Business Insider.

Latham & Watkins partner Michael Rubin interviews Steve Satterfield, VP and associate general counsel for privacy at Meta, onstage.

This was Latham's second run of the AI Academy and the first time it was offered to first-year associates across global offices. Senior lawyers walked through actual cases that were sped up by using AI. Junior litigators participated in breakout sessions on relevant tools, while young corporate attorneys discussed how the tech is transforming the way clients do business.

Fiona Maclean, a longtime Latham partner and vice chair of the technology and AI practices, says the training will continue long after the weekend academy. It runs structured training programs for different associate years and offers skills training on a rolling basis. Rubin says the firm is also developing a virtual AI Academy for lawyers of any experience level, launching early next year.

Rubin says he doesn't believe the tech will cannibalize opportunities for junior attorneys.

"We think this is an opportunity for lawyers to step up," Rubin said, "and do more engaging work, more strategic work — the very work that clients turn to Latham to do."

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Latham & Watkins 人工智能 AI Academy 法律科技 Big Law Artificial Intelligence Legal Tech Future of Law
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