Technology


“Too early” to say online court is the future, research warns

9 August 2019

There is as yet “no clear answer” to the question of whether an online court will facilitate easier access to the court system, research has found.


SRA reveals how £700k Legal Access Challenge cash is being spent

8 August 2019

The breakdown of how the £700,000 of government money awarded to the SRA to run the Legal Access Challenge has finally been published, with nearly half of it going to partner Nesta Challenges.


City firm called in to advise on Legal Access Challenge

29 July 2019

The innovation division of City law firm Ashurst has been appointed as technical adviser to the Legal Access Challenge, which aims to support and accelerate ideas to use technology to improve access to justice. The challenge is the centrepiece of… Read More


MPs restrict role of Lord Chief in setting online court rules

26 July 2019

MPs have backed a government amendment that would limit the role of the Lord Chief Justice in approving requests to make new rules for the proposed online court.


More backing for AI contract drafting start-up

24 July 2019

An artificial intelligence start-up whose contract-writing assistant draws on a law firm’s own body of data and teaches itself without the need for training by lawyers, has received a further £1.2m in seed funding.


MPs urge caution over speed of online court development

19 July 2019

MPs have urged the government to learn the lessons of previous major IT projects and move cautiously with the development on online courts.


University’s legal tech students build app for advice centre

18 July 2019

Law students on Manchester University’s first ever legal tech and access to justice course have designed an app to enable clients of its legal advice centre to find help when the centre is closed.


Crime agency adds online lawyer impersonation to hit list

17 July 2019

The impersonation of lawyers to commit advance fee frauds has been added to the list of large-scale cyber-attacks from which the National Cyber Security Centre is trying to protect the public.


Gauke: no more court closures – for now

11 July 2019

There will not be another round of court closures for the time being, but this may change as technology takes hold, justice secretary David Gauke said yesterday.


Legal Access Challenge “building innovation community”

9 July 2019

The government-funded Legal Access Challenge has received more than 85 expressions of interests in applying for funding, the Solicitors Regulation Authority said yesterday.


LSB report: Buy-in vital for legal technology regulation

8 July 2019

Achieving buy-in for technology regulation from everyone involved in lawtech – from developers to users – is crucial to it working well, according to an analysis looking at the lessons for legal regulators that can be drawn from the medical and financial sectors.


Government ensures paper-based access to online courts

4 July 2019

The Courts and Tribunals (Online Procedure) Bill had its first reading in the House of Commons yesterday after the government added further protection for those unable or unwilling to use online processes.


BLM launches robot claims handler – but “it won’t replace humans”

3 July 2019

A robot claims handler which can take “subjective decisions” about the reliability of witnesses will not replace its human colleagues, the law firm behind it has said.


VC fund targets lawtech with focus on big data

3 July 2019

Venture capitalists have launched a fund aimed at lawtech start-ups, with an emphasis on businesses that hope to exploit big data for corporate decision making.


Advice app backed by Slater & Gordon rolls out nationally

1 July 2019

An app that offers users the full range of consumer legal advice and support for up to £24 a month is being rolled out after a pilot saw 70% of users renew their subscription.

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Blog


Change in regulator shouldn’t make AML less of a priority

While SRA fines for AML have been climbing, many in the profession aren’t confident they will get any relief from the FCA, a body used to dealing with a highly regulated industry.


There are 17 million wills waiting to be written

The main reason cited by people who do not have a will was a lack of awareness as to how to arrange one. As a professional community, we seem to be failing to get our message across.


The case for a single legal services regulator: why the current system is failing

From catastrophic firm collapses to endemic compliance failures, the evidence is mounting that the current multi-regulator model is fundamentally broken.