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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:efea5e02d013abdb1de1275961470365594a036e@swoogo.com
DTSTAMP:20260421T164504Z
DESCRIPTION:Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping discovery—but not 
 always in the ways headlines suggest. This panel brings together senior li
 tigators and eDiscovery leaders from major U.S. law firms to discuss how A
 I is actually being used in discovery today\, where it is delivering real 
 value\, and where risks and constraints still require caution.\n\nThe disc
 ussion will focus on practical\, lawyer-driven use cases such as fact inve
 stigation\, deposition preparation\, document prioritization\, and large-s
 cale data interrogation. Panelists will explore how AI fits into (and some
 times challenges) traditional workflows like culling\, TAR\, and iterative
  review\, with a close look at defensibility\, quality control\, and trans
 parency.\n\nThe panel will also address the growing ethical and procedural
  questions surrounding AI in discovery—when\, if ever\, AI use should be d
 isclosed\; how it is discussed with opposing counsel and courts\; and how 
 lawyers are navigating meet-and-confer obligations. The session concludes 
 with a candid discussion of client expectations\, cost implications\, and 
 how AI is affecting staffing models and litigation economics. Attendees wi
 ll leave with grounded insights\, practical frameworks\, and clear takeawa
 ys they can apply immediately
DTSTART:20260310T193000Z
DTEND:20260310T203000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260421T164504Z
LOCATION:Room 405.1
SEQUENCE:0
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Beyond the Hype: Practical Use\, Procedural Risk and Client Expecta
 tions using AI in Discovery
TRANSP:OPAQUE
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshapin
 g discovery—but not always in the ways headlines suggest. This panel bring
 s together senior litigators and eDiscovery leaders from major U.S. law fi
 rms to discuss how AI is actually being used in discovery today\, where it
  is delivering real value\, and where risks and constraints still require 
 caution.</p>\n\n<p>The discussion will focus on practical\, lawyer-driven 
 use cases such as fact investigation\, deposition preparation\, document p
 rioritization\, and large-scale data interrogation. Panelists will explore
  how AI fits into (and sometimes challenges) traditional workflows like cu
 lling\, TAR\, and iterative review\, with a close look at defensibility\, 
 quality control\, and transparency.</p>\n\n<p>The panel will also address 
 the growing ethical and procedural questions surrounding AI in discovery—w
 hen\, if ever\, AI use should be disclosed\; how it is discussed with oppo
 sing counsel and courts\; and how lawyers are navigating meet-and-confer o
 bligations. The session concludes with a candid discussion of client expec
 tations\, cost implications\, and how AI is affecting staffing models and 
 litigation economics. Attendees will leave with grounded insights\, practi
 cal frameworks\, and clear takeaways they can apply immediately</p>\n\n<p>
 <img alt='' height='50' src='https://assets.swoogo.com/uploads/medium/5984
 546-68f3a07e93233.png' width='50' /></p>
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ACTION:DISPLAY
DESCRIPTION:Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping discovery—but not 
 always in the ways headlines suggest. This panel brings together senior li
 tigators and eDiscovery leaders from major U.S. law firms to discuss how A
 I is actually being used in discovery today\, where it is delivering real 
 value\, and where risks and constraints still require caution.\n\nThe disc
 ussion will focus on practical\, lawyer-driven use cases such as fact inve
 stigation\, deposition preparation\, document prioritization\, and large-s
 cale data interrogation. Panelists will explore how AI fits into (and some
 times challenges) traditional workflows like culling\, TAR\, and iterative
  review\, with a close look at defensibility\, quality control\, and trans
 parency.\n\nThe panel will also address the growing ethical and procedural
  questions surrounding AI in discovery—when\, if ever\, AI use should be d
 isclosed\; how it is discussed with opposing counsel and courts\; and how 
 lawyers are navigating meet-and-confer obligations. The session concludes 
 with a candid discussion of client expectations\, cost implications\, and 
 how AI is affecting staffing models and litigation economics. Attendees wi
 ll leave with grounded insights\, practical frameworks\, and clear takeawa
 ys they can apply immediately
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