Will brain-monitoring technology influence the practice of law?
A report written for The Law Society, an independent professional body for solicitors in the UK, examines the impact of neurotechnology on the practice of law. From a business of law standpoint, “In light of the development of attention-monitoring neurotechnologies, the billable hours metric might become too crude for some clients who might prefer to pay for ‘billable units of attention.’’’ Read more at lawsociety.org.uk
Share this story, choose a platform

Brought to you by BridgeTower Media
Free Weekly Newsletter
Recommended content
Content Marketing: Why every firm needs content pillars in its marketing strategy
Content Marketing: Why every firm needs content pillars in its marketing strategy By Edie Reinhardt Marketing a law firm requires [...]
How to give tough feedback
There are ways to be firm and constructive when giving direction to subordinates without being mean or off-putting. Read more [...]
The Banksy effect: Why some leaders fade instead of lead
Banksying means that instead of facing problems head-on, leaders retreat and avoid confrontation – to the detriment of firm goals, [...]
Could ‘RAG’ be the answer to hallucinating AI tools?
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) may have the potential to address the most significant concern with legal artificial intelligence tools: Fabricated citations. [...]