As artificial intelligence (AI) continues to rapidly evolve, legal professionals are left wondering how to seamlessly integrate this advancing technology into their workflow. Despite the complexity of AI, there are tasks that can be efficiently carried out by legal practitioners with the aid of generative AI, a facet of the technology that remains underutilized due to the seeming divide between the technicalities of AI and the legal operation.
In an attempt to bridge this gap, KLoBot Inc. recently launched KLapper, a no-code bot builder designed to help law firms fully harness the power of generative AI without the usually associated technical challenges. KLapper provides its service securely via Azure and offers a usage-based licensing model, potentially generating significant savings for law firms.
The KLapper user dashboard displays a suite of bots developed by KLoBot CEO Ragav Jagannathan, demonstrating a user-friendly creation process for AI bots. Users can customize these bots to suit their specific needs by simply clicking on dropdown menus, uploading source documents, and incorporating “intelligent connectors” to achieve desired results. Furthermore, all the technical intricacies are neatly kept behind-the-scenes, affording users the liberty to create their ideal digital assistants.
Once set up, these digital assistants interact within various platforms such as Microsoft SharePoint, Zoom, Teams, Web apps, Mobile apps and over 15+ other supported channels, learning from the firm’s data resources like Netdocs or iManage. They can assist with legal research, provide document summaries, and execute mundane tasks such as logging billable hours or generating service tickets for IT issues. The ability of these AI bots to adapt and perform desired tasks delivers valuable time to legal practitioners, especially given the increasing imposition of challenging billing processes by clients.
While it may be tempting for law firms to seek ways to fit AI into a single, comprehensive solution, this might not be the most practical approach. Instead, providing teams with a safe and secure avenue for building and testing applications that meet their specific needs might be a more viable strategy. And this is exactly what KLapper offers.
This thoughtful insight into AI application in the legal space raised by Joe Patrice, a senior editor at Above the Law, highlights a pertinent issue within the legal profession: At some point, we need to give lawyers access to the advantages AI can provide now. Check out the original article for more detail.