Digital White Papers

May 2013: Litigation and Practice Support

publication of the International Legal Technology Association

Issue link: https://epubs.iltanet.org/i/126361

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PREDICTIVE ANALYTICS HELP LAWYERS MAKE PRECISE DECISIONS by Don Philbin of Picture It Settled Cheap storage and fast computers have accelerated information production. We create more information every two days than we did from the dawn of civilization through 2003, according to Google's Eric Schmidt. Legal is no exception. It took U.S. appellate judges 69 years to fill the Second Series of the Federal Reporter. It will take less than half that time to fill the third series, even as official publication diminishes. Thanks to much faster machines and distributed computing, learning systems can mine data in new and exciting ways. In his new book, "Tomorrow's Lawyers," Richard Susskind notes by 2020 the average desktop will have the processing power of the human brain; by 2050, it will have more than humanity combined. And it's not just to search and retrieve static information anymore — IBM's Watson beat the two best "Jeopardy!" contestants two years ago using machine learning, information retrieval and advanced natural language understanding. But don't wait until 2020 or 2050! Computers already crawl the entire federal court docketing system (PACER) daily looking for patent documents, so practitioners can determine whether to try or settle their cases. Predictive analytics also scour company share prices to help value securities class actions. Other systems analyze billions of dollars in legal spending to help project how much a matter will cost. Learning systems use patent-pending algorithms and deep data on settlement moves in thousands of cases to predict accurately where parties will settle based on their early moves. These are exciting times for legal technology. It doesn't replace lawyers; it gives them a sharper focus. Human judgment with advanced analytics accessing lots of data is a powerful combination.

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