Section News

& emerging technology and issues regarding technology

ABA Techshow 2019: Part 1

From the Attendee’s Perspective

Mark I. Unger, Former Chair of the Computer & Technology Section

William D. Smith, Council Member of the Computer &Technology Section

Mark: It’s a Brave New World

It’s like band camp for legal tech geeks. Seriously, I can’t tell you how much I look forward to ABA TechShow each year. I’ve missed one in last ten years due to family issues, but this is like another family. And this year looks to be very much reunion-like with some new additions to the family. 

On the flight from Austin,I’m already running into techie-peepsall around. LawPay  is a major sponsor this year and two out of the ten are on the flight. Happened to look acrossthe shuttle aisle from aiport parking lot to catch one of these folks sporting his very cool LawPay vest. And it’sgame on. I’m sitting with another Vendor to myleft and across the aisle a solo whoescaped from big law and legal tech wonk, both going to their first TechShow. Oh, howtheir world is about tochange.

 Change is the one thing that comes at these events. We’re currently experiencing (or being bombarded with) more options for law practice management, e-Discovery, client communication, document management, automation, artificial intelligence and general legal tech that is morphing these categories in new and different ways, adding not just layers of tech on top of each other, but crossing into the functionality of other systems, in an effort to gain market share.

 In the case of ABA TechShow, change comes in the form of tracks and topics. Many of the traditional speaker- guard is back, as well as many new lawyer presenters, as many vendor presenters as can get in, as well as now an infusion of law school types, as TechShow goes younger and law schools increasingly add practice management technology to their curriculums in some way. This is highlighted by the addition of a technology component to the definition of competence in certain State’s rules, following the ABA’s telegraph back in 2012. See ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct, Comment 8 to Model Rule 1.1. There are now 36 States that have added some form of this technology language to their definition of competence, and as of February 26, 2019, Texas joined this group of states as the 36th. For a full list of the states having implemented this, see Bob Ambrogi’s ongoing tally found at https://www.lawsitesblog.com/tech-competence.

This sea of change has also taken the form of many new startups, a number of which pitched in the Startup Alley Competition leading off TechShow at on Wednesday night, which was hosted by Ambrogi and sponsored by Clio. Among these are several that have looked to integrate with practice management systems, further adding to the change and morphing of system on system to make law practice more automated, seamless and hopefully more efficient. This is an example of how convergence and integration have continued to ramp up efforts to make legal practice more profitable at a time when there is even further disruption in the legal space.

Among the companies pitching are YourFirmApp, a company started by Chris Smith, a small firm Family Law Attorney in Oklahoma, and which offers personalized Apps for law firms and app-based portals for client communication and other functionality. While this App didn’t win the start-up alley competition (as winner was chosen by voting of the audience in attendance), it is now offering a ton of functionality including it’s client facing solution. These include features such as mobile messaging, mobile bill pay (with integration with LawPay, Clio, and Practice Panther), Calendaring, document sharing, and also document signing).

While many of the practice management systems have Apps, this system appears to have a deeper functionality and promise for the Attorney-Client experience.

Inaddition, automation (perhaps more aptlymore automatic document assembly)seems to be one of the hottopics (following AI, much of which is building on theautomation trend that has beencoming for several yearsnow; See IFTTT, Zapier and others).

HelpSelf Legal (now called Documate) claims to automate document production, turning forms into ready-fileable documents, in the areas of Family Violence, Debt Collection, Clear Marijuana convictions (it’s listed), Guardianship, and Child Support, with the addition of the ability to have “Instant Client-Facing Apps, and publish intake interviews that populate necessary documents. It also touts the ability to provide flat fee document services on your site,” and thus further promotes both this automation trend along with increased secure client communication. During the Startup-Alley pitch, the emphasis was on the ability to help attorneys service those who may be the victims of family violence and are not only the least able to defend themselves but also the least able to afford legal representation. According to the founder, their product was able to help attorneys file over 2000 more applications in California legal aid environment than prior year.

OurChildInfo.com, originally created by another family law attorney, this start up claims to be a unique (non-deletable messaging and tracking system for parents of children. The big current players in this market are OurFamilyWizard.com (which provides an App for both parents and functionality for Attorneys to view/download records, etc) and AppClose. OurChildInfo claims uniqueness as they only charge one parent ($7.50/mo.) and the other parent is free, though one competitor (AppClose) offers a freemium model and makes money via portion of payments received from one payor to another (along the lines of fintech-type startups PayPal, Venmo and others). They claim further uniqueness in that a parent can’t delete, back date or alter data and can print out a log file with date and time stamped log file.

War Room online deposition review app, another interestingly named startup,while around since 2012 and Chicago based,claims to be unique in that it is the first web-based deposition reviewsoftware. While many have used the tested Apps foriPad— TrialPad,TranscriptPadand Doc Review Pad (*iPad users only), this web based depo review may appeal to some and I’d be interested to see if people, especially those collaborating on depo review will latch onto this technology. It does boast similar technology to add tags (i.e. issue codes) to depositions then produce reports that would show where in multiple depositions a particular fact was shown to be true.

Startup Alley Pitch Results:

The Biggest vote getters—

DocStyle was an excellent surprise, boasting the ability to take a PDF and convert to Word using an algorithm 6 years in development to maintain (recreate) the formatting of the original document and make it editable. This product was launched today (2/27/19) here at this pitch contest and follows another offering of a metadata removal product which competes with others but seems very user friendly. It allows for single or batch metadata removal and also has an Outlook plugin that will automatically strip the metadata and convert it to PDF for sending. It is somewhat customizable in that it has an ‘ignore’ button but that button can also be turned off by administrators to prevent the human factor from creeping in.

The Winner:

The pitch garnering the most number of votes was Jurisbytes, another Attorney startup, based on the premise of clients-demanding-text communication with Attorneys. This product, definitely in its infancy, boasts the ability to create secure text messages using existing mobile devices, and protecting the telephone numbers of Attorneys (and ostensibly clients). It will also create a daily mail report showing all texts so that these communications can be stored in client file/folder for documentation purposes. They have no integrations but claim to have these coming. I know of one other product (zipwhip) that is sold as business text messaging for clients and has the ability to use landlines and also has many and multiple integrations such as Clio, Salesforce, Zoho and others via Zapier. When asked about comparison and other functionality as compared to some of the practice management Apps integrating with App solutions, they were definitely thinking of those integrations. The unique feature here seems to be the ability for an Attorney to use existing cell phones to text messages with clients, then get a report to then be able to bill for those communications. As always, look for many changes and additions with this and all other solutions every six months. The more things change, the more they…well change. It’s a brave new world out here.  Read more about all the competitors at the LawSites page.

Mark I. Unger

Mark is a family lawyer, mediator, and consultant in San Antonio, primarily focused on family law. He is the founding member of The Unger Law Firm and is highly involved in the integration of technology and the law. Find him on Twitter @miunger or online (www.unger-law.com).

12/07/18 Course Materials

Second Annual Technology & Justice For All Conference.

THANK YOU FOR JOINING US!  Get a jump on some reading material and download the seminar materials for 12/07/18. It is as simple as 1, 2, CLICK HERE (updated) to download the compressed file (.zip)!   We hope you enjoy the information overload!

2018 Strata Data Conference

Google saw fit to bestow a free ticket to a member of the Council to attend the Strata Conference (https://conferences.oreilly.com/strata) in New York City.  The Strata Conference is all about Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning and Data Science, as well as some attendant topics.  Size-wise, this conference is on a par with LegalTech and the International Legal Technology Association (“ILTA”) Conference .  However that is about where the similarity ends.  As far as I could tell, I was the only attorney in attendance.  They were curious to know why I was there, but when I described e-discovery, data breach situations and the like — they got it.  A very welcoming lot.  Here are some observations:

1. As with the legal conventions, AI was all the rage.  Not surprising, however, because the Strata conference is all about data, so Data Science (aka “Big Data”) plays an more important role.  AI is used to analyze Big Data.  There is just so much data that only a machine could cope with it.

2. Open source software applications dominate the field.  In fact, there was one presentation entitled “Commercial Software in an Increasingly Open Source Ecosystem.”  Large companies now insist on open source applications (for a variety of reasons).  So much so that when they go looking for solutions, they turn to the open source versions first.  Even Microsoft was touting how well you could run Linux and other open source applications on Azure.  Microsoft knows that it has a credibility problem in this area, but they are truly making an effort to make amends with the open source community (and by extension, corporate America).

3. AI and Data Science are quickly being institutionalized in corporate America.  Corporate networks are being modified to capture company data for use in AI-based applications (which have an insatiable thirst for data).

4. The pace of AI development is exponential, and that pace won’t slow down anytime soon.  Indeed, the pace of infrastructure modifications to take advantage of AI development will ensure that that exponential rate of GPU (graphic processor units) growth continues for the near term.

5. Moore’s law is officially dead — kind of.  The current rate of growth of *CPU* capability is 1.1:1, rather than the 1.5:1 during the heyday of Moore’s law.  Don’t despair.  The growth rate for *GPU’s* (favored by AI applications) is currently 1.5:1.  Moore’s law isn’t quite dead yet, but it has shifted a bit.

6. AI is getting easier to develop and use.  Software is being developed to abstract the process of creating AI.  This abstraction process is intended to insulate normal people from the nitty-gritty of developing AI.  I saw one Microsoft engineer build an AI-based chat bot in less than 5 minutes (he timed himself, right in front of us).  The point is, AI is getting easier to develop and use all the time.  Soon, even a lawyer will be able to do it.  What this portends is hard to fathom, but people would be wise to monitor the developments.  Even better, AI has now hit the “hobby” level, in that the tools to start developing AI are free (from a software royalty standpoint) and the hardware costs to do it (beyond a snail’s pace) are modest.

With Technology and Justice for All

Join us for an evening social, followed by a jam-packed CLE!

Register Now!

CLE Sponsored by the Computer & Technology Section, State Bar of Texas Friday, December 1, 2017 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Texas Law Center, 1414 Colorado Street, Austin, TX 78701

Register Online Here or View the Full Program

Cost (Includes electronic materials, continental breakfast and lunch):

  • $0  – Legal Aid and Texas Opportunity & Justice Incubator Attorneys
  • $100 – Members of the Computer and Technology Section
  • $125 – All others**

Overview. Leading practitioners will discuss a wide range of technology-related topics, including laws dealing with technology, security issues and recommendations, issues related to use of social media, latest developments in eDiscovery, tips and tricks to increase efficiency and realize cost savings, and more.

Topics include: 

  • Welcome and Opening Remarks by Chief Justice Nathan Hecht of the Supreme Court of Texas
  • 15 Tech Laws to Protect Your Clients: Cases and Codes for the Courtroom: Shawn Tuma, Lisa Angelo, Pierre Grosdidier (45 Minutes)
  • Improving Your Posture: How to Increase the Security of Your Practice and Protect Client Confidentiality: Elizabeth Rogers, David Coker (45 Minutes, 15 Minutes Ethics)
  • #NoTweetingAfterMidnight: Ethical Use of Social Media for You and Your Clients: John Browning (30 Minutes, 30 Minutes Ethics)
  • On Sale Now: eDiscovery for Low or No Cost: Craig Ball (30 Minutes)
  • The Princess Bride: Mobile Lawyering and Using Low Cost Tech for Client Communication: Rick Robertson, Mark Unger (30 Minutes)
  • 60 Apps in 60 Minutes: Tips, Tricks, and Technology to Improve Your Practice: Kristen Knauf, Joseph Jacobson, Shannon Warren, Al Harrison (60 Minutes)

Join us the evening before for a reception. Attendees and Section Members are invited to a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. on Thursday, November 30, 2017 at WeWork University Park located at 3300 N. Interstate 35, 7th Floor, Austin, TX 78705. View the eVite and RSVP. 

This event will sell out! Sign up soon to secure your spot. Approximately 50 seats only are expected to be sold for this exciting CLE.  You will earn 4 hours of CLE credits while you learn the latest developments in technology and law, plus you get the chance to network with colleagues from around the state.

Reserve your room! DoubleTree Suites by Hilton, just a few steps from the CLE, is offering suites at a rate of $146/night from Nov. 29-Dec. 2. Just reserve your room HERE or call 800-222-8733, with Group Code STA and Group Name State Bar of Texas. Hurry because rooms at these rates will not last long!

**Join the section for an annual fee of $25 on your My Bar Page and get all the 
additional benefits of membership in addition to saving money on this CLE.
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