This Episode’s Top 5 Takeaways:
AI is reducing the need for junior lawyers. Multiple panelists noted a growing acknowledgment (including from Jordan Furlong’s ABA Tech Show keynote) that law firms may need fewer associates as AI handles tasks traditionally given to first-years. Some smaller firms are already hiring lawyers at paralegal rates and requiring AI use in all work.
Legal tech is moving to where lawyers already work. Mathew Kerbis highlighted a trend at ABA Tech Show of tools being built inside email and Word, rather than standalone platforms. Tools like Candle AI and TwinCounsel stood out as building for lawyers’ existing workflows.
Anthropic’s “Mythos” model is raising alarm bells. The panel discussed Anthropic’s new model as a significant moment — powerful enough that it reportedly triggered an urgent meeting between Treasury Secretary Bessent, Fed Chair Powell, and Wall Street leaders. Even Claude itself didn’t know about Mythos yet when asked.
AI agents are enabling autonomous, parallel work. Damien Riehl described running five AI agents simultaneously building web applications while on vacation in Mexico, converting his WordPress site to static files on Cloudflare and cutting his hosting bill from $300/year to $0. He also maxed out his $200/month Claude plan — a rare feat.
Privacy, cybersecurity, and AI compliance are converging. Nicole Morris, fresh from the IAPP Global Summit, observed that lawyers and law schools are too siloed to handle AI compliance, which increasingly requires integrated knowledge of privacy, cybersecurity, and AI law together — a major gap in legal education and practice.



