u/dormidary

Creating a small sub for practical legal AI tool discussion

I recently transitioned from biglaw to an in-house position at a small public company, and I've been trying to build useful legal AI tools for the last few months - probably similar ones to tools loads of other lawyers have been building at their own companies recently. I’ve enjoyed following this sub, but I’m also looking for something a bit narrower for people in my situation: a small, private, practitioner-focused space for lawyers actively using AI in day-to-day work and trying to build repeatable workflows, so we can compare notes and learn.

Topics might include:

* contract review systems

* prompt/workflow design

* Claude / ChatGPT / Harvey in real use

* internal adoption challenges

* confidentiality guardrails

Public forums are great for broad discussion, but I think people (certainly me) are uncomfortable posting specific tools they've built or custom instructions they've been working on in a public space. There's also a lot of vendors in any public sub, which definitely have their value but also dolute the specific discussions I'm looking for.

If that sounds interesting, comment or PM me. Even better, if something like this already exists, I’d love to hear about it!

reddit.com
u/dormidary — 3 days ago
▲ 15 r/biglaw

OK seriously, where do we talk about getting better at AI usage?

I just went in house recently. I've spent a pretty good chunk of my time over the last month building some AI tools to handle different rote parts of my job: NDA review, reg FD review, disclosure benchmarking, etc. They're working well now, but these must be tools that dozens or hundreds of people are all working on separately right now. Is there a place to compare notes or learn best practices?

Even a non-legal forum that goes beyond basic prompting advice and "AI will change the world" sermons would be much appreciated.

reddit.com
u/dormidary — 4 days ago