Legal AI Lab with Hidde Bruinsma explores with top experts how artificial intelligence is reshaping the legal world. From lawyers and judges to law students, everyone will face fundamental shifts driven by AI. Each episode dives into the opportunities, risks, and new skills required, preparing you for the legal market of the future.
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Legal AI Lab with Hidde Bruinsma explores with top experts how artificial intelligence is reshaping the legal world. From lawyers and judges to law students, everyone will face fundamental shifts driven by AI. Each episode dives into the opportunities, risks, and new skills required, preparing you for the legal market of the future.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Banning AI at law schools will not save legal education. It will make it unfair.
In this episode of Legal AI Lab, Hidde Bruinsma speaks with Thibault Schrepel, Associate Professor of Law at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and founder of Stanford’s Computational Antitrust Project.
Schrepel explains why banning AI creates distorted competition, why AI detection does not work, and why law schools must rethink how they teach and assess students instead of trying to preserve outdated systems.
Based on a two year classroom experiment, he shows what happens when students use AI without guidance, with guidance, or not at all. The results challenge common fears about shortcuts and show why AI can strengthen learning when used deliberately.
The conversation also dives into the limits of future proof regulation, the challenges of the EU AI Act, and how AI is already changing law firm business models, billing structures, and the role of junior lawyers.
AI is not ending the legal profession. It is removing the most tedious work and increasing the value of human judgment, creativity, and strategy.
It forces legal education to confront how lawyers actually create value.
You’ll learn
• Why banning AI in law schools creates inequality rather than fairness
• What actually happens when students use AI in legal education
• Why detecting AI generated work does not work at scale
• How legal education must change exams and teaching methods
• Why future proof regulation is impossible and adaptive law is necessary
• How the EU AI Act struggles with fast technological change
• Why hourly billing is under pressure
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Chapters
0:00 Introduction.
3:05 Fear, prohibition and the illusion of control
7:40 There is no hiding from AI in legal practice
12:20 What really goes wrong when lawyers misuse AI
17:30 AI does not replace reasoning. It exposes weak reasoning
22:45 Judges, responsibility and meaningful human control
28:30 Why AI literacy matters more than technical skill
33:50 New legal markets beyond traditional law firms
38:40 Why old billing models are under pressure
43:10 The EU AI Act. Guardrails, risk categories and legal responsibility
47:40 What the AI Act means for lawyers, judges and legal education
50:10 Final reflection. Regulation as a condition for trust
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AI verandert de rechtspraak sneller dan wie dan ook had verwacht.
In deze aflevering spreekt Hidde Bruinsma met Jos Smits, Programmamanager AI bij de Rechtspraak, over deepfakes, bewijsproblemen, hallucinerende modellen en de ontwikkeling van RechtspraakGPT.
Jos legt uit waarom klassieke ideeën over bewijs en waarheidsvinding niet langer houdbaar zijn in een tijdperk waarin beelden, stemmen en documenten volledig te vervalsen zijn. En waarom AI niet de rechter vervangt, maar wel de manier waarop rechters werken ingrijpend zal veranderen.
Je hoort onder meer:
• Hoe deepfakes het bewijsrecht fundamenteel uitdagen
• Waarom AI soms de bewijslast juist omdraait
• Wat RechtspraakGPT wel en niet zal kunnen
• Hoe de rechtspraak verantwoord met LLMs wil werken
• Waarom menselijke oordeelsvorming belangrijker wordt in een AI-wereld
Deze aflevering is onmisbaar voor iedereen die nadenkt over de toekomst van recht, waarheidsvinding en technologie.
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This episode is powered by Zeno. Zeno is an AI native legal workspace built for Dutch and EU law.
Its AI navigates law like a human legal professional. Secure, transparent and grounded in authoritative sources.
Visit zeno.law and make deep thinking your competitive edge.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Billions of decisions. Zero judges. And a justice system that lives inside your phone.
Pietro Ortolani, Professor of Digital Law and Dispute Resolution at Radboud University, reveals why major platforms like Meta, Amazon and eBay already operate the largest dispute resolution systems on the planet. Much larger than any court we know. And far faster.
In this wide ranging conversation, Pietro explains how platforms became de facto courts, why automation and AI already settle the vast majority of online disputes, and what the legal world can learn from this silent revolution. He shows how young lawyers can create new forms of online courts, why the hourly billing model is collapsing and why this moment is the best time in history to enter the legal profession.
You will hear why justice at scale is possible, how the Digital Services Act is reshaping content moderation and why the next generation of lawyers should build the future instead of fearing it.
What you will learn
• How online platforms created the world’s largest dispute resolution systems
• Why AI already handles the majority of disputes you never hear about
• What judges and lawyers must understand about automated decision making
• How the DSA creates a new market for out of court dispute resolution
• Why law students should embrace creativity instead of fearing automation
• How AI can act as a mirror for judicial bias
• Why this is the best moment in history to become a lawyer
Quote
“It has never been a better or more interesting time to be a lawyer.”
Powered by Zeno
This episode is powered by Zeno. Zeno is an AI native legal workspace built for Dutch and EU law.
Its AI navigates law like a human legal professional. Secure, transparent and grounded in authoritative sources.
Visit zeno.law and make deep thinking your competitive edge.
Chapters
0:00 Opening
1:03 What platforms can teach us about dispute resolution
3:14 How eBay accidentally built the first online court
6:18 Why platforms settle billions of disputes without judges
8:49 The limits of automated moderation
11:09 Should we fear the Amazonification of justice
13:27 The Oversight Board as a model for modern justice
16:42 The rise of a new market for digital dispute resolution
18:58 Can we copy these systems into public courts
21:12 How AI empowers rather than replaces judges
24:11 AI as a mirror for judicial bias
26:32 The real danger of private control over public justice
27:49 Do we already have a robot judge
30:00 Why banning AI in courts makes no sense
31:52 What young lawyers can build in this new legal world
34:48 How the DSA transforms transparency and fairness
38:22 Can we create global standards for algorithmic justice
42:01 Why innovation meets resistance inside the legal sector
45:11 What esports teach us about fast and fair dispute resolution
48:46 Should law schools ban AI or embrace it
51:31 Why this is the best moment to become a lawyer
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The world’s first AI law didn’t happen by accident. It was a political fight.
Brando Benifei, Member of the European Parliament and lead negotiator of the EU AI Act, joins Legal AI Lab to reveal what really happened behind the scenes during the 36-hour negotiation that defined how artificial intelligence will be governed in Europe.
He explains how Big Tech lobbying tried to weaken the rules, why trust and transparency are key to innovation, and how the so-called “Brussels effect” could make the EU’s AI law a global benchmark.
Together with host Hidde Bruinsma, Benifei discusses how Europe’s human-first approach contrasts with the U.S. and China, and what this means for the future of AI, law, and democracy.
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This episode is powered by Zeno. Zeno is an AI-native legal workspace built for Dutch and EU law.
Its AI navigates law like a human legal professional—secure, transparent, and grounded in authoritative sources.
Visit zeno.law and make deep thinking your competitive edge.
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Chapters
0:00 Introduction – Who is Brando Benifei and why the AI Act matters
1:45 How the idea of an AI law in Europe began
3:20 The 36-hour negotiation that shaped the AI Act
6:15 Inside the political pressure and Big Tech lobbying
9:10 Balancing innovation with regulation
11:40 Why trust and transparency drive progress
14:05 The Brussels Effect – how EU laws shape the world
16:25 What makes the AI Act different from U.S. and China approaches
18:40 How AI regulation impacts startups and small companies
21:00 Human rights, bias, and the ethical limits of AI
23:30 Enforcement: how the AI Act will actually work in practice
25:15 What comes after the AI Act
27:00 Closing thoughts – AI, democracy, and the future of trust
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Wat gebeurt er met de menselijke maat in de rechtspraak als AI steeds vaker dossiers analyseert, uitspraken schrijft en zelfs mee de raadkamer in gaat?
Manuella van der Put, raadsheer bij het Gerechtshof ’s-Hertogenbosch en onderzoeker naar kunstmatige intelligentie in de rechtspraak, ziet grote kansen en fundamentele vragen. Ze praat over de grenzen van AI, de rol van emotie in rechtvaardigheid en het risico dat technologie beslissingen neemt die we zelf niet meer begrijpen.
In dit gesprek van Legal AI Lab gaat het over de spanning tussen mens en machine in de rechtszaal. Kan een AI-systeem rechtvaardig zijn? Wat betekent empathie in een digitale rechtsgang? En hoe zorgen we ervoor dat AI ons helpt beter te oordelen, in plaats van het oordeel over te nemen?
*Het systeem dat Manuella in dit interview noemde heet RechtspraakGPT en is ontwikkeld door de Raad voor de rechtspraak. Belangrijk: het systeem ondersteunt alleen bij tekstverwerking (samenvatten, vertalen, aanpassen van stijl), maar spreekt nadrukkelijk geen recht en geeft geen juridische oordelen. Het is zo ontworpen dat het dit type vragen weigert.
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Law firms that don’t embrace AI will soon look like relics of the past.
Minesh Tanna, Partner at Simmons & Simmons and Chair of the City of London Law Society AI Committee, warns that the legal profession is changing faster than lawyers are adapting.
In this episode of Legal AI Lab, Tanna discusses how AI is reshaping law firms, replacing manual tasks, and redefining what it means to be a lawyer. He shares what keeps him up at night: if junior lawyers no longer do the groundwork that builds judgment and instinct, what will the senior lawyers of the future look like?
Tanna also explains why firms that still fear AI are making the same mistake as those who once refused to use computers and why embracing AI responsibly is now the only way forward.
You’ll learn:
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This episode is brought to you by LegalMike, the smartest AI assistant built for the Dutch legal practice. Visit www.legalmike.ai to discover how LegalMike can boost your practice.
0:00 Introduction and how AI is changing the legal world
1:18 Why law firms are still slow to adapt
3:04 The future of young lawyers and what keeps Minesh up at night
5:27 If juniors don’t learn, who becomes tomorrow’s senior lawyer
8:42 How AI will redefine the human edge in law
10:15 Being scared of AI is like refusing to use computers in the 80s
12:36 Building Percy, the AI system transforming Simmons & Simmons
14:58 Law firms of the future with fewer lawyers and more technologists
16:45 The business model of law is already shifting
18:33 How lawyers can adapt and stay relevant in the age of AI
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AI is not just changing the tools lawyers use, it is redefining the foundations of the legal profession.
In this episode of Legal AI Lab, hosts Hidde Bruinsma and Martijn Doornbos speak with Professor Richard Susskind, the world’s leading voice on the future of law and technology.
Together they explore how artificial intelligence is transforming legal education, reshaping law firms, and expanding access to justice.
From short-term automation in law practice to long-term innovation that empowers non-lawyers, this conversation highlights the profound digital transformation underway in the legal system.
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This episode is brought to you by LegalMike, the smartest AI assistant built for the Dutch legal practice. Visit www.legalmike.ai to discover how LegalMike can boost your practice.
00:02 AI in legal education
12:45 Rethinking the lawyer’s role
19:30 The challenge for young lawyers
33:00 Empowering non-lawyers
54:00 Preparing for AGI
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