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AI offers helping hand with pricing

26 June 2019
Issue: 7846 / Categories: Legal News , Technology , Legal services
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Artificial intelligence (AI) software that helps law firms price their services has been launched by IT company Intapp

According to the company, its new product, Intapp Pricing, will allow firms to ‘scope, price, resource, budget and monitor engagements with increased flexibility and accuracy’. Intapp says it recently conducted a survey in which 42% of lawyers said they felt their office technology experience would be improved if they had access to more intuitive software. Intapp vice president Jose Lazares said: ‘Clients today are asking professional services firms—especially in the legal realm—to provide more value and clarity in their engagements.’

Issue: 7846 / Categories: Legal News , Technology , Legal services
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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Arc Pensions Law—Ian D’Costa

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Shakespeare Martineau—Jonathan Warren

Real estate disputes team strengthened by London partner hire

Morgan Lewis—Christian Tuddenham

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Litigation partner joins disputes team in London

NEWS
Government plans for offender ‘restriction zones’ risk creating ‘digital cages’ that blur punishment with surveillance, warns Henrietta Ronson, partner at Corker Binning, in this week's issue of NLJ
Louise Uphill, senior associate at Moore Barlow LLP, dissects the faltering rollout of the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 in this week's NLJ
Judgments are ‘worthless without enforcement’, says HHJ Karen Walden-Smith, senior circuit judge and chair of the Civil Justice Council’s enforcement working group. In this week's NLJ, she breaks down the CJC’s April 2025 report, which identified systemic flaws and proposed 39 reforms, from modernising procedures to protecting vulnerable debtors
Writing in NLJ this week, Katherine Harding and Charlotte Finley of Penningtons Manches Cooper examine Standish v Standish [2025] UKSC 26, the Supreme Court ruling that narrowed what counts as matrimonial property, and its potential impact upon claims under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975
In this week's NLJ, Dr Jon Robins, editor of The Justice Gap and lecturer at Brighton University, reports on a campaign to posthumously exonerate Christine Keeler. 60 years after her perjury conviction, Keeler’s son Seymour Platt has petitioned the king to exercise the royal prerogative of mercy, arguing she was a victim of violence and moral hypocrisy, not deceit. Supported by Felicity Gerry KC, the dossier brands the conviction 'the ultimate in slut-shaming'
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