🎙️ Ep. #134 — AI-Powered Legal Writing: How BriefCatch Helps Lawyers Write Smarter, Not Harder with Ross Guberman.

My next guest is Ross Guberman — founder of BriefCatch, nationally recognized legal writing trainer, and author of several acclaimed books on persuasive legal writing. Ross has trained thousands of lawyers and judges across the country. After years of teaching the craft of legal writing, he channeled that expertise into building BriefCatch — a purpose-built AI writing tool that lives right inside Microsoft Word and Outlook, scanning your legal documents using roughly 17,000 rules to help you write cleaner, sharper, and more persuasive work product. Whether you're a solo practitioner or part of a large firm, Ross brings insights that are immediately practical — no matter your tech comfort level. 🚀

Join Ross Guberman and me as we discuss the following three questions and more!

  1. 🏆 From your vantage point — having trained thousands of lawyers and judges and now running BriefCatch — what are the top three ways lawyers can leverage AI-driven writing tools like BriefCatch inside Word and Outlook to measurably improve the quality and persuasiveness of their briefs without sacrificing their own voice or judgment?

  2. ⚖️ For a tech-curious but time-strapped practitioner, what are the top three everyday workflows beyond traditional brief writing where lawyers are leaving the most value on the table by not using tools like BriefCatch and other legal tech?

  3. 🔮 Looking ahead five years, what are the top three technology competencies every lawyer must develop — not just "nice to have" skills — to collaborate effectively with AI, stay ethically compliant, and turn technology into a genuine competitive advantage rather than a source of risk?

In our conversation, we cover the following:

  • [00:30] 💻 Ross's current tech setup — MacBook Pro M4 Max, macOS, and iPhone 16

  • [01:30] 🔄 Why keeping your OS updated matters — security and performance

  • [03:00] 🖥️ External monitors, portable screens, and traveling with tech

  • [07:00] 📱 Using your iPad as an external monitor via Apple Sidecar

  • [08:30] 🎪 Bonus Question #1 - Ross’s experience in the ABA TECHSHOW Startup Alley

  • [11:00] ✍️ Question #1 — Top 3 ways to use AI writing tools to improve briefs without losing your voice

  • [12:00] 🧑‍⚖️ Using AI to role-play as a skeptical judge or opposing counsel to pressure-test your brief

  • [13:00] 📊 Transforming fact sections into timelines and case law into comparison charts

  • [14:00] 📝 Using AI as a self-check for hyperbole, redundancy, and tone

  • [15:30] 📲 How judges now read briefs on iPads — and what that means for your writing style

  • [17:00] 📂 Using Text Expander to store and deploy your best prompts

  • [18:30] 🎙️ Google Notebook LLM as a learning and podcast creation tool

  • [20:00] 🧩 Bonus Question #2 — What is BriefCatch and why use purpose-built legal AI over general tools?

  • [21:00] 🚀 The origin story of BriefCatch — from side hustle in 2018 to funded legal tech startup

  • [22:30] ⚙️ Workflow, ethics rules, and attorney-specific conventions — why legal-specific AI wins

  • [24:30] 📋 Question #2 — Top 3 underused everyday workflows for lawyers using AI

  • [25:00] 📧 Using AI with your email to surface unanswered messages and unresolved threads

  • [25:45] 📁 Mining your past work product for patterns, style, and reusable language

  • [26:30] 📅 Having AI review your calendar and correspondence for efficiency insights

  • [27:00] 🔒 Data privacy, security settings, and the risks of default AI configurations

  • [28:30] 🏛️ New York State's data protection approach and what more states should do

  • [29:30] 🤖 Question #3 — Top 3 technology competencies every lawyer must master in the next five years

  • [30:00] 🧠 Understanding how LLMs actually "think" — reading the AI's reasoning chain

  • [30:45] 🖊️ Making AI output sound like you — the human voice in an AI-generated world

  • [31:30] 🔧 Integrating AI into your daily workflow while preserving human judgment

  • [32:00] 👏 Closing thoughts and where to find Ross and BriefCatch

RESOURCES

🔗 Connect with Ross Guberman

  • 📧 Email: ross@briefcatch.com

  • 🌐 Website: https://www.briefcatch.com

  • 💼 LinkedIn: Search "Ross Guberman" on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com

📌 Mentioned in the Episode

🖥️ Hardware Mentioned in the Conversation

☁️ Software & Cloud Services Mentioned in the Conversation

📰 ABA TECHSHOW 2026 Recap: From AI Hype to LLM Reality, Google Workspace, and Ethical Lawyering in the Age of Bots ⚖️🤖

The Real Story Behind ABA TECHSHOW 2026

The techshow is the conference to go to keep your pulse on the technology lawyers should be using every day!

Walking into ABA TECHSHOW 2026 this year, I wasn’t thinking about shiny gadgets; I was thinking about competence, client service, and what it will mean to practice law in an era dominated not just by “AI,” but by large language models (LLMs) quietly shaping almost everything we see and share online. During my work on The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page blog and podcast, I keep running into the same pattern: lawyers know they should understand legal technology, yet they worry they’ll break something, breach a rule, or look foolish in front of their staff. TECHSHOW 2026 aimed directly at that anxiety — but this year, the conversation needs to go beyond what AI and generative AI can do and toward how LLMs and search bots are already shaping our professional identities online and offline. ⚖️💻

Keynotes: The “AI Dividend” and Your Time

The keynote lineup captured the tension between promise and risk. Legal market analysts highlighted what some called the “AI Dividend”: when machines take over routine drafting and research, lawyers gain time to think, advise, and advocate at a higher level. The real question — one I’ve been hammering on The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page for years — is what you will do with the time technology gives back (some of that time should include reviewing your work, e.g., your case citations). Tech-savvy speakers pushed attendees to look past vendor hype and focus on the broader digital environment, where consumer-facing tools, search engines, and recommendation algorithms are setting new expectations for speed, transparency, and availability.

Practical AI in the Sessions

Inside the conference rooms, the “Taming the Machines” and related AI tracks met baseline concerns (some with hands-on workshops) focused on realistic use cases: assisted drafting, pattern spotting in discovery, and summarizing voluminous documents. These sessions were built for lawyers who live in Word, Outlook, Google Workspace, and practice management systems and who simply want to stop retyping the same paragraphs. The faculty hammered home a critical point: generative AI is an assistant, not a decision-maker; you remain the lawyer, responsible for accuracy, judgment, and ethics under the ABA Model Rules. 🤖📄

Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, and Using What You Already Own

Mathew Krebis’ session on Google Workspace drove that message home in very practical terms. He showed how many firms are only scratching the surface of tools they already pay for: shared Drives with well-structured permissions, real-time collaboration in Google Docs, Gmail automation for intake and follow-up, and Google Calendar combined with Tasks to keep matter timelines under control. When you layer in emerging AI features in Workspace — smart replies, document summaries, suggested outlines — you see how even modest use of these tools can dramatically reduce friction in daily practice, and the tools Mathew discussed are not isolated to “law practice management” systems.

The takeaway was powerful: before you chase a new platform, fully exploit the ecosystem you already have. For many firms, “being more tech-savvy” starts with properly configuring their Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, or other SaaS platform, rather than buying yet another service.

Podcasting, Social Media, and LLM-Driven Visibility

Meanwhile, one other yet important frontier — and one that still feels underexplored — is what happens when LLMs and search bots become the primary lens through which clients, colleagues, and even opposing counsel discover you. That’s where my panel, 🎧 Podcasting for Lawyers: The Truth Behind the Mic, came in.

Ruby L. Powers, Gyi Tsakalakis, Stephanie Everett, and I discussed podcasting and social media not just as marketing channels, but as structured signals fed into LLM-driven engines that are constantly indexing, ranking, and inferring who is an authority on a given topic. Whether you talk about appellate practice, family law, or even a hobby outside the law, your content becomes training data for Generative Engine Optimization/LLM bots that decide which voices surface first when someone types a question into an AI chatbox. 🎙️🌐

In other words, your digital footprint is no longer static. It is being interpreted, reassembled, and presented as answers — often without you ever seeing the intermediate steps. That reality raises a new layer of ethical questions under the ABA Model Rules. Model Rule 7.1’s prohibition on false or misleading communications about the lawyer or the lawyer’s services takes on a new twist when LLMs remix snippets of your posts, podcasts, Google Workspace–hosted client alerts, and blog articles into composite “advice.”

You might be scrupulously accurate in your content, but if an LLM mischaracterizes it or presents it out of context, what then? TECHSHOW 2026 addressed traditional risks like hallucinated case citations, but there is room for a deeper, explicit conversation about how LLM-driven discovery intersects with advertising, communication, and competence duties.

EXPO Hall: Tools, Timekeeping, and Vendor Reality Checks

The EXPO Hall, as always, served as a laboratory of possibilities. Practice management platforms, billing tools, document automation, and a wave of AI-enhanced products competed for attention. Timekeeping tools that automatically capture activity across devices and applications and then propose draft time entries have grown dramatically since last year. For lawyers still reconstructing their days from memory and sticky notes, this is more than a marginal upgrade; it directly affects revenue, work-life balance, and accuracy.

But the fair warning comes here: make sure vendors are showing you what their product can do today, not what they hope it will do someday. In the LLM era, marketing decks are often several steps ahead of deployed reality. 🧾⏱️

Remember, you have an obligation under Model Rule 1.1 (competence) and Model Rule 5.3 (responsibilities regarding non-lawyer assistance) to understand the capabilities and limitations of any tech you “delegate” work to. Asking hard questions about current functionality, data handling, and audit trails is not being difficult; it is part of your duty of care.

Cybersecurity, Confidentiality, and LLM Risk

networking oppOrtunities like the taste of tecHshow” is a great way to talk with and learn from other lawyers about using tech in the practice of law.

The sessions on cybersecurity and confidentiality continued to do vital work. Under Model Rule 1.6, our obligation to protect client information extends to cloud storage, email, video conferencing, and the mobile devices we casually use in airport lounges. The “Guardians of the Data” track walked through practical checklists rather than abstract fearmongering: password managers, multi-factor authentication, properly configured backups, and vendor due diligence.

For firms running on Google Workspace, that translated into concrete steps: enforcing two-step verification, tightening Drive sharing settings, using client-specific shared Drives instead of ad hoc personal folders, and monitoring admin logs for suspicious access. The move from generic “AI” to LLM-powered services on any platform increases data risk, because many tools rely on ingesting your content — sometimes including client information — to improve their models. If you don’t understand where your data is going and how it is used, you cannot credibly say you are meeting confidentiality obligations. 🔐☁️

Competence, Human-in-the-Loop, and Everyday Workflows

You have an obligation under Model Rule 1.1 (competence) and Model Rule 5.3 (responsibilities regarding non-lawyer assistance) to understand the capabilities and limitations of any tech you “delegate” work to. Asking hard questions about current functionality, data handling, and audit trails is part of your duty of care.

Balancing this skepticism, though, is an equally important truth: becoming proficient with AI and LLM-based tools is not a spectator sport. You cannot satisfy your duty of technological competence from the sidelines. You have to use the tools first on a small scale, then progressively in more critical workflows, always with appropriate supervision and verification.

That might mean piloting an AI drafting feature in Google Docs and Microsoft Word for internal templates, or testing structured intake forms and automations inside Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 before rolling them out firm-wide. Ignoring AI because it feels uncomfortable is no longer the safer option. In some practices, failing to integrate it intelligently — while peers and opposing counsel do — may itself raise competence concerns as expectations evolve in courts and among clients. 🧩📈

Saturday Sessions: From “Use AI” to “Use AI Responsibly”

On Saturday, the 9 a.m. conversation among ABA President Michelle A. Behnke, Immediate Past President William R. “Bill” Bay, and President-Elect Barbara J. Howard, underscored how all of this ties into the rule of law and access to justice, framing AI as something lawyers now have a responsibility to actually use, not simply watch from the sidelines. The 10 a.m. session with Judge Timothy S. Driscoll then shifted the focus from “use AI or be left behind” to “use AI responsibly,” making it clear that judges, too, are integrating AI into their work and that they are not immune from mistakes when they rely on it.

The message for everyone in the courtroom ecosystem was simple and blunt: “Review, review, and review” any work touched by AI, because AI is a non‑infallible tool that does make errors and can mislead the unwary. Together, these sessions acknowledged the growing digital divide: lawyers and clients who can’t or won’t adopt technology risk falling out of the mainstream of legal services, while those who adopt it recklessly risk eroding confidence in both their own work and the justice system as a whole.

We are not merely debating convenience; we are deciding who gets effective representation and who is left out because the lawyer they might have hired never appeared in their LLM‑driven search results — or appeared with AI‑boosted visibility but poor ethical judgment. Technology, in this sense, is not optional; it is one of the few levers we have to expand meaningful access to legal help, provided we wield it with intent, humility, and rigorous human review. ⚖️🧠

LLM Literacy: The Next Core Competency

That balance — between caution and experimentation — is where TECHSHOW 2026 both excelled and showed its next frontier. Many sessions made AI approachable, breaking down concepts for lawyers with limited to moderate tech skills and providing concrete workflows they could apply on Monday. What I would like to see more explicitly next year is programming that treats LLM literacy as a core competency: understanding how LLMs are built, how they index and surface information, how your content feeds into them, and how that affects everything from client intake to reputation, whether you are working in Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, or a specialized legal platform.

From my vantage point as a legal tech ambassador at The Tech-Savvy Lawyer, the most successful sessions respected that many lawyers are highly capable professionals who simply haven’t had the time or guidance to modernize their workflows. They don’t need to become prompt engineers. They need guardrails, roadmaps, and clear examples of how to align AI, LLM tools, and mainstream platforms like Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace with the ABA Model Rules and local bar guidance. When faculty focused on incremental steps — tightening cybersecurity configurations, adding a layer of AI-assisted drafting under strict human review, building a consistent content strategy that LLMs can reliably recognize — the room should lead in.

A Tough-Love Takeaway for Lawyers

If you are a lawyer who still feels behind, here’s the core message I took away from TECHSHOW 2026, with a bit of tough love: you don’t need to chase every new tool, but you can’t afford to ignore LLM-driven AI and the platforms you already live in, like Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace, any longer. Understand the basics; pilot one or two well-vetted tools to start improving your efficiency without sacrificing the need for a true human-in-the-loop.

SEE YOU IN CHICAGO FOR ABA TECHSHOW 2027!!!

Read your jurisdiction’s ethics opinions on AI and technology. Build habits that protect client data by default. Use your own content — whether blog posts, newsletters, or podcasts — to train the bots to see you as a trusted authority rather than a digital afterthought. Ultimately, your bar license may be at more risk from not engaging with AI than from engaging with it carefully and intelligently.

The future of legal practice will not wait until we are all comfortable; it is here now, embedded in the search boxes, recommendation engines, and tools your clients already use. TECHSHOW 2026 made that clear. The next move is yours. 🚀⚖️

MTC

📓 Word of the Week: GEO (Generative Engine Optimization)

Generative Engine Optimization empowers modern lawyers with AI-driven legal marketing!

In legal marketing, GEO—Generative Engine Optimization—is the next evolution beyond traditional SEO. GEO focuses on making your content understandable, trustworthy, and quotable by generative AI systems like ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, Perplexity, and Google’s AI experiences. 🧠

Traditional SEO was about ranking in a list of blue links. GEO is about becoming the source that AI tools cite when a potential client asks a legal question in natural language. For lawyers, this means writing clear, jurisdiction-specific, client‑focused answers that AI can safely lift into its responses.

Under ABA Model Rule 1.1, technological competence now includes understanding the benefits and risks of AI tools you use in practice and in marketing. 📚 GEO is not optional “extra credit” anymore, it is part of staying reasonably up to date with “the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology.”

From SEO to GEO for Lawyers

SEO still matters. You still need solid titles, meta descriptions, and clear on‑page structure so Google and other search engines can crawl and index your site. What changes with GEO is the audience for your content expands from humans and search bots to large language models that want direct, conversational, and well‑structured answers.

Think of it this way:

  • SEO asks, “How do I rank for ‘divorce lawyer Toronto’?”

  • GEO asks, “How do I become the answer when someone asks, ‘How does divorce work in Ontario and when should I call a lawyer?’ in an AI chat box?” 🇨🇦

  • Effective GEO content for law firms tends to share these traits:

    • Answer‑first summaries at the top of the page.

    • Clear jurisdiction and practice‑area signals.Plain‑English explanations of specific client questions.

    • Updated timestamps and trustworthy citations to statutes, rules, and court sites.

For attorneys with limited or moderate tech skills, this is less about learning code and more about tightening how you explain your work online. GEO rewards the same skills you already use in client communications: clarity, precision, and staying within your lane. ✅

GEO and the ABA Model Rules ⚖️

Ethical AI use strengthens confidentiality, competence, and trust in legal practice!

GEO strategy touches several ABA Model Rules that govern how you use AI and publish legal content:

  • Model Rule 1.1 – Competence. ABA guidance on AI (e.g., Formal Opinion 512) explains that competence includes understanding how AI tools work, their limitations, and their failure modes. If you expect clients to find you through AI answers, you should understand what those systems are likely to say about your practice area and how your content feeds into them.

  • Model Rule 1.6 – Confidentiality. GEO does not require you to feed client facts into AI systems. You can build GEO‑optimized content using hypotheticals and public information. When you do use AI tools to draft or refine content, you must confirm how the tool handles data, whether it trains on your prompts, and whether additional client consent is needed. 🔐

  • Model Rule 1.4 – Communication. When AI tools materially affect how a matter is handled, ABA guidance suggests you may need to discuss that with clients. In marketing, that translates to accurate disclaimers: clearly state that your GEO‑friendly pages are “general information, not legal advice,” and that an AI‑generated summary is no substitute for a direct consultation.

  • Model Rules 7.1–7.3 – Advertising and Solicitation. GEO content must remain truthful, non‑misleading, and consistent with advertising rules. Avoid guarantees, avoid puffery about being “the best,” and ensure that AI‑oriented content still reflects actual experience and jurisdictional limits.

Handled well, GEO can support your ethical duties: it helps you publish accurate, current, and educational information that clients and AI tools can rely on.

Practical GEO Steps for Law Firms

Difference between SEO and GEO shapes modern legal marketing and AI visibility.

Here are concrete ways to start moving from SEO to GEO without overhauling your entire site:

  1. Rewrite key pages with answer‑first structures. Open with a 3–5 sentence plain‑English answer to the main question, then expand with headings and FAQs.

  2. Add jurisdiction markers everywhere it matters. Include the province or state, city, and court level on your practice pages and FAQs.

  3. Build detailed FAQ hubs around real client questions in your niche, using conversational phrasing that mirrors how people talk to AI tools. 💬

  4. Strengthen E‑E‑A‑T signals: list credentials, publications, bar memberships, and awards; link to reputable external sources; keep author bylines current.

  5. Maintain technical SEO basics: fast, mobile‑friendly pages with clear title tags, meta descriptions, headings, and schema markup (e.g., for FAQs and legal services).

  6. Regularly refresh high‑value pages to keep them current with legal changes and to signal freshness to both search engines and AI systems. 🔁

  7. You do not need to do everything at once. Start with one practice area, identify the ten most common questions, and create a GEO‑optimized resource page that you would be comfortable seeing quoted by an AI tool.

Exclusive ABA TECHSHOW 2026 Offer 🎙️⚖️ — $5 Off The Lawyer’s Guide to Podcasting (On-Site Only, While Supplies Last!) + Join Our Live Sessions on Podcasting and Video Presence

Hey ABA TECHSHOW 2026 Attendees! 🎉

I’m thrilled you’re joining us in Chicago to explore how technology can elevate modern law practice. ABA TECHSHOW is one of my favorite spaces for real-world conversations about legal tech, and this year I’m especially excited to connect with those of you who want to put your voice — and your expertise — to work through podcasting and video.

ABA TECHSHOW 2026 attendees get your discounted LTG: The Lawyer’s Guide to podcasting at the techshow while supplies last!!!

To celebrate TECHSHOW and support lawyers who are podcast-curious but not necessarily “tech experts,” I’m offering a special, in-person-only discount on my book, The Lawyer’s Guide to Podcasting. 📚🎙️ During ABA TECHSHOW 2026, attendees can purchase a physical copy on-site for $19.99, which is $5 off the regular $24.99 price, on-site only and while supplies last.

This book is written for lawyers with limited to moderate technology skills who want a clear, practical, ethics-aware roadmap to launching and sustaining a podcast. You don’t need a production team or a studio; you need a realistic workflow, the right level of tech, and an understanding of how the ABA Model Rules apply when your voice becomes part of your marketing and client-education strategy.

Join Me and My Co-Hosts at ABA TECHSHOW 2026 🎤

You’ll find me on the ABA TECHSHOW 2026 program in two sessions that sit right at the intersection of technology, communication, and professional responsibility.

🎧 Podcasting for Lawyers: The Truth Behind the Mic

In this session, I’ll be joined by a powerhouse group of legal podcasters and marketers:

  • Ruby L. Powers – A board-certified immigration attorney, law firm owner, legal innovator, and host of the Power Up Your Practice podcast, Ruby brings deep experience in law firm leadership, remote practice, and legal tech adoption.

  • Gyi Tsakalakis – A well-known legal marketing professional and podcast host, Gyi focuses on helping lawyers understand how digital marketing, SEO, and content (including podcasts) drive real-world client development.

  • Stephanie Everett – Co-author of The Small Firm Roadmap Revisited and host of The Lawyerist Podcast, Stephanie works with small firms on strategy, operations, and building sustainable, client-centered practices.

Together, we’ll discuss how, in a world crowded with blogs and social media, podcasting gives lawyers a unique way to build authority and connect with audiences on a more personal level. You’ll hear from lawyers and experts who actively run podcasts and work with law firms, and we’ll share the exact steps we’ve used to create compelling legal content that resonates, supports branding, and respects ethical boundaries.

🎥 Camera Ready Anywhere: Mastering Video Meetings with Clients, Courts, and Colleagues

In this session, I’ll be co-presenting with Temi Siyanbade:

  • Temi Siyanbade – An attorney, speaker, and author of Show Don’t Tell: How Lawyers Can Use Video to Stand Out, Create More Value, and Revolutionize Their Firms, Temi helps legal professionals strategically use video to build trust and communicate more effectively.

Virtual communication is now a permanent part of practice, whether you’re meeting with clients, negotiating with opposing counsel, or appearing before the court. In this session, Temi and I will share practical best practices for using Microsoft Teams and Zoom, including audio, video, lighting, framing, and on-screen presence, so your tech setup supports — rather than undermines — your advocacy and client service.

Ethics, ABA Model Rules, and Tech Competence ⚖️

Find me at the techshow to get your onsite discount and take home a great guide to get your podcast started!

Podcasting and video both touch directly on your professional responsibilities. In The Lawyer’s Guide to Podcasting, I connect the practical steps of planning, recording, and publishing to the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct, including:

I walk through how to use clear disclaimers, separate legal information from legal advice, and avoid inadvertently revealing confidential or identifying information. The goal is to help you become tech-savvy in a way that is realistic, ethical, and sustainable.

What You’ll Get from The Lawyer’s Guide to Podcasting 📘

Inside the book, you’ll find:

  • Plain-language tech guidance: realistic microphone, software, and hosting recommendations for busy lawyers.

  • Step-by-step workflows: planning, recording, editing, and publishing made manageable for your schedule.

  • Ethical “checkpoints”: where to pause and consider confidentiality, advertising rules, and jurisdiction-specific requirements.

  • Integration tips: how to embed your podcast on your website, share it in newsletters, and repurpose episodes for SEO and client education.

This is not a book about becoming a sound engineer; it’s about becoming a tech-savvy lawyer who uses podcasting thoughtfully.

On-Site Only, While Supplies Last 🛍️

Because this offer is tied to ABA TECHSHOW 2026, the $5 discount is available only for on-site purchases by attendees and only while physical copies last. I wanted this to be a tangible benefit for those who make the trip — and a practical next step if one of our sessions sparks your interest in podcasting.

Here’s how to take advantage of it:

  • Add “Podcasting for Lawyers: The Truth Behind the Mic” and “Camera Ready Anywhere: Mastering Video Meetings with Clients, Courts, and Colleagues” to your TECHSHOW schedule.

  • Bring your questions about tech, ethics, workflows, and content.

  • Find me on-site after the sessions or around the conference to pick up your discounted, signed copy of The Lawyer’s Guide to Podcasting for $19.99 (regularly $24.99), on-site only and while supplies last. 📚✍️

SEE YOU AT THE TECHSHOW!!!

ABA TECHSHOW is about practical innovation and ethical implementation. Podcasting and video live right at that intersection — modern tools that, when used thoughtfully and in line with the ABA Model Rules, can enhance your competence, your communication, and your client relationships.

If you’ve been thinking about starting a legal podcast — or want a structured way to decide whether podcasting fits your goals — I’d love for you to join our sessions and pick up the book during the show. 🎧⚖️

MTC: Staying Ahead of the Curve: Why ABA Techshow Is Not Optional for Today's Practicing Lawyer

the aba techshow is the perfect place for lawyers to learn the skills they need to know to meet aba requirements to stay abreast of the benefits and risks associated with relevant technOlogy used in the practice of law!

Let me be direct: technology is no longer a "nice-to-have" in legal practice. It is an ethical obligation. 🎯

The American Bar Association made that clear in 2012 when it amended Comment 8 to Model Rule 1.1 — the foundational rule governing competence. That comment explicitly states that a lawyer must "keep abreast of changes in the law and its practice, including the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology." Not someday. Not when it's convenient. Now — and continuously. If you are a practicing attorney and you are not actively engaging in legal technology education, you are not just leaving efficiency on the table. You may be skating dangerously close to an ethical violation.

That is precisely why I keep coming back to ABA TECHSHOW — and precisely why I encourage every lawyer I speak with, regardless of their comfort level with technology, to attend.

🔑 ABA TECHSHOW Is Built for You — Yes, You

I want to address something head-on: the assumption that Techshow is a conference for tech enthusiasts and IT professionals. It is not. The 2026 conference, running March 25–28 at McCormick Place in Chicago, features over 100 technology vendors and programming explicitly designed for lawyers at every skill level — including those who still break into a cold sweat opening a new software interface. The sessions span everything from AI fundamentals to cybersecurity to practice management to video communication. There is a deliberate on-ramp built into the conference structure because the organizers understand that the legal profession is diverse in its relationship with technology.

I have been privileged to serve as a speaker and faculty member at TECHSHOW, and this year is no exception. At TECHSHOW 2026, I am co-presenting two sessions that I believe speak directly to where the legal profession is right now.

The first, Podcasting for Lawyers: The Truth Behind the Mic, pulls back the curtain on how lawyers can leverage podcasting as a powerful tool for building authority, deepening client relationships, and positioning themselves as thought leaders in their practice areas. In a media landscape saturated with blogs and social media posts, a podcast gives you something rare: an intimate, sustained connection with your audience. As you know, I run my own podcast — The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page Podcast — and in that session, alongside colleagues and previous podcast guest Ruby Powers and hopefully future podcast guests Gyi Tsakalakis, and Stephanie Everett, we share the real, actionable steps behind building compelling legal content. 🎙️ 

learn how setting up a podcast studio carries over to help with other legal events!

My second session, Camera Ready Anywhere: Mastering Video Meetings with Clients, Courts, and Colleagues, my co-presenter, Temi Siyanbade, and I explore the practical, professional, and ethical dimensions of virtual communication. As virtual meetings have become a permanent fixture of legal practice — whether you are conducting client consultations on Zoom, appearing remotely before a tribunal, or negotiating with opposing counsel on TECHSHOW — looking and sounding competent on camera is no longer optional. This session covers audio and video setup, lighting, platform best practices, and how to project professionalism in a digital environment. The irony is that many lawyers who are meticulous about their appearance in a courtroom give almost no thought to how they present themselves on a video call. That gap matters. It matters to clients. It matters to judges. And yes, it can matter to your reputation.

⚖️ The ABA Model Rules Are Not Suggestions

Let us return to the ethics piece, because I think it deserves more than a passing mention. ABA Model Rule 1.1 sets the standard for competent representation. Most lawyers understand this in terms of legal knowledge — knowing the law, understanding procedure, being prepared. Fewer appreciate that the ABA's 2012 amendment has extended that standard to technology.

As of today, 40-plus states have adopted some version of the technology competence obligation articulated in Comment 8. The District of Columbia most recently joined that group in 2025. This is not a fringe interpretation. It is a growing national consensus about what it means to be a competent lawyer in the modern era.

Rule 1.6 — governing confidentiality — also carries technology implications. A lawyer who fails to understand how their email system works, who stores client data on unsecured devices, or who falls victim to a phishing attack that exposes client files has potentially breached their duty of confidentiality. Rule 5.3 requires that supervisors ensure non-lawyer staff are also compliant with the Rules — and that includes how they use firm technology. The tentacles of technology competence reach throughout the Model Rules.

Conferences like TECHSHOW exist, in part, to help you satisfy these obligations in a practical, hands-on way. The ABA Law Practice Division has consistently described Techshow as an opportunity to understand the "benefits and risks" of technology — the exact language of Comment 8. This is not accidental. It is intentional alignment between the programming and your professional duties.

🚀 The Future Is Already Here — Are You Ready?

The 2026 theme — Innovation That Protects the Rule of Law — reflects something I have believed for years: technology, when adopted thoughtfully, does not undermine the legal profession. It strengthens it. AI tools are transforming how lawyers research, draft, and communicate. Wearable technology and augmented reality are beginning to reshape how we work and collaborate. Deposition technology is being revolutionized by AI-powered transcript tools and remote video platforms. None of this is science fiction. It is happening right now, in law firms across the country.

The question is not whether you will engage with these tools. The question is whether you will engage with them proactively — understanding their benefits and their risks — or reactively, scrambling to catch up after a client complaint or a disciplinary inquiry.

I am not here to alarm you. I am here to invite you. 🤝

your podcast studio set up iMpacts on you are perceived in the virtual legal landscape!

Whether you are a solo practitioner trying to figure out which AI tool is worth your subscription fee, or a partner at a mid-size firm wondering how to lead your team through a technology transition, Techshow offers you a safe, supportive, and genuinely energizing environment to learn. Most of the sessions are CLE-eligible. The vendors are accessible and eager to demonstrate — not sell. The community is collaborative.

More than four decades of working with technology and nearly 30 years of those in the legal arena have taught me one thing above all else: the lawyers who thrive are not necessarily the most tech-savvy. They are the most tech-willing — the ones who stay curious, stay engaged, and never stop learning. 💡

TECHSHOW is where that learning happens. I will see you there.

REGISTER HERE!

MTC

🎙️ Ep. #133 | AI Search, GEO & Legal Marketing Tech: How Small Law Firms Win Cases — Not Just Clicks!

My next guest is Nick Cohen, Chief Operating Officer of Matador Solutions — a legal marketing think tank and agency — and a newly minted partner at Cohen Injury Law Group. Nick brings a rare dual perspective: he lives the daily grind of running a law firm AND helps over 170 firms across the country use technology and marketing strategy to grow their practice. With more than $1 billion in case value generated for clients, Nick knows what separates the law firms that thrive from the ones that spin their wheels. 🚀

Whether you are just hanging out your shingle or you have been practicing for years and feel overwhelmed by the alphabet soup of SEO, GEO, PPC, and AI, this episode breaks it all down in plain language. Nick shares actionable steps — some of which cost nothing — to help your firm show up where your next great client is already looking. ⚖️

Join Nick Cohen and me as we discuss the following three questions and more!

  1. 🤔 What are the top three ways a small or mid-size law firm can leverage AI-driven search — like Google AI Overviews and ChatGPT — to reliably generate better cases, not just more clicks?

  2. 💡 For firms that feel overwhelmed by SEO, paid search, and social media, what are the top three pieces of marketing technology or automations they should implement first to turn their website into a true new case acquisition system?

  3. 🏆 Looking across $1 billion+ in case value generated for over 170 law firms, what are the top three technology habits the most successful firms share — and what are their less successful peers simply not doing?

In our conversation, we cover the following:

  • [0:00] 🎤 Introduction & five-star review shoutout

  • [0:45] 👨‍💼 Nick's background: Matador Solutions, Cohen Injury Law Group, and tech stack overview (Jira, Google Suite, Claude, ChatGPT, WordPress, Slack)

  • [1:30] 💻 Hardware setup: MacBook Pro M4, desktop, HDMI monitor — what Nick runs on daily

  • [3:00] 📱 iPhone, planned obsolescence, and the Apple ecosystem slowdown conversation

  • [4:00] ❓ Question 1: Leveraging AI-driven search (Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT) to get better cases — not just traffic

  • [5:00] 🔍 GEO vs. SEO explained — what is Generative Engine Optimization and why it matters for your law firm right now

  • [6:30] 📖 The difference: SEO = Google ranking; GEO = getting cited by ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and Grok

  • [8:00] 🤖 Schema markup, robots.txt, and opening your website to LLM crawlers — practical steps any firm can take

  • [9:00] 📋 Attorney directory listings (Avvo, Super Lawyers, FindLaw) — are they worth the money in 2026?

  • [10:30] ✍️ Tip #2: High-quality thought leadership content as a GEO and SEO powerhouse

  • [11:30] ⭐ Tip #3: Reviews, reviews, reviews — the single highest-ROI, zero-cost activity for any law firm

  • [12:00] 📲 The "one-click review link" strategy: why text beats email every time

  • [13:00] 😬 How to handle negative reviews — call first, respond professionally, and why a 4.9 rating beats a perfect 5.0

  • [15:00] ❓ Question 2: Top three marketing tech tools/automations for overwhelmed firms — CallRail, case management software, and understanding your channels

  • [17:30] ❓ Question 3: The technology habits that separate high-growth firms from stagnant ones — intake systems, engagement, and growth mindset

  • [19:30] 🗺️ How Matador Solutions walks a brand-new firm from zero to a steady stream of cases — step by step

  • [22:00] 📬 Where to find Nick Cohen

RESOURCES

🔗 Connect with Nick Cohen

📚 Mentioned in the Episode (Non-Hardware / Non-Software)

  • 🎙️ Apple Podcasts — podcasts.apple.com ⚖️ Matador Solutions — Legal marketing agency — matadorsolutions.net

  • 📋 Avvo — Attorney directory — avvo.com

  • ⚖️ Cohen Injury Law Group — Nick's law firm — https://cohenandcohen.net/⭐ Facebook Reviews — facebook.com

  • 📊 GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) — The emerging discipline of optimizing for AI-driven search engines

  • ⭐ Google Reviews — google.com/business

  • 📋 FindLaw — Attorney directory — findlaw.com

  • 📋 Super Lawyers — Attorney directory — superlawyers.com

  • ⭐ Yelp — yelp.com

💻 Hardware Mentioned in the Conversation

  • 📱 Apple iPhone 15 — Nick's smartphone (approximate model) — apple.com/iphone

  • 📱 Apple iPhone (latest, annual upgrade) — Michael's smartphone — apple.com/iphone

  • 🖥️ Apple Mac Studio (M3 chip) — Michael's desktop — apple.com/mac

  • 🖥️ Apple MacBook Pro (M4 chip) — Nick's primary laptop — apple.com/macbook-pro

☁️ Software & Cloud Services Mentioned in the Conversation

🎧 Enjoy the episode? Please leave us a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ five-star review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast feeds!

MTC: Is Apple’s MacBook Neo the Real Game Changer for Lawyers Stuck Between Windows and Mac? 🤔💼

A lawyer’s choice between the MacBook Neo vs. Windows is not only a strategic business choice but a professional ethics one too!

For years, many lawyers have treated the move from Windows to Mac as a luxury upgrade rather than a strategic business decision. 💻⚖️ Apple new MacBook Neo, with its $599 starting price (and lower with education discounts), directly challenges that mindset by bringing a true macOS laptop into the same budget range as many mid-tier Windows machines. The question for lawyers on the fence is no longer “Can I justify a Mac?” but “Is the Neo a responsible, ethically sound choice for my law practice, under both my budget and my professional duties?”

From a hardware and price perspective, the Neo matters because it compresses the long‑standing price gap between Windows laptops and MacBooks. At around $599, it lives squarely in the territory where most solos and small firms previously defaulted to Windows PCs or even Chromebooks, not because they preferred them, but because MacBooks seemed out of reach. Apple is using its Apple Silicon and tight supply chain control to keep Neo’s price relatively stable even as RAM, SSD, and CPU prices push other laptop prices up as much as 40 percent. In an environment where many PC makers must raise prices or cut corners, the Neo offers lawyers a predictable, brand‑name option that is less vulnerable to component price spikes in the short to mid term.

Dream itTech‑Savvy Lawyers: If your workflow already runs on Microsoft 365, webmail like Gmail, cloud‑based practice management, and browser‑based legal research tools, your computer’s operating system is now just invisible plumbing 🧑‍🔧 —focus on security, value, and productivity, not whether it’s Windows or Mac. 🔔

Dream itTech‑Savvy Lawyers: If your workflow already runs on Microsoft 365, webmail like Gmail, cloud‑based practice management, and browser‑based legal research tools, your computer’s operating system is now just invisible plumbing 🧑‍🔧 —focus on security, value, and productivity, not whether it’s Windows or Mac. 🔔

That said, lawyers should not mistake the Neo for a no‑compromise replacement for every Windows laptop. The device cannot run Windows natively, and running Windows in a virtual machine on Apple Silicon is possible but not ideal as a core strategy. If your practice still depends on a specific legacy Windows desktop app that has no modern web or Mac equivalent—think an older on‑premises case management system or niche desktop timekeeping tool—you must factor that in, because the Neo is not the machine for you. For everyone else, especially those whose workflow is already centered on Microsoft 365, webmail (e.g., Google), cloud practice management, and browser‑based research tools, the operating system is increasingly just the plumbing under the hood.

This is where today’s SaaS‑driven legal stack changes the analysis. Many of the core tools lawyers now rely on—cloud practice management, document automation, e‑signature, e‑billing, calendaring, and research platforms—are delivered through the browser or platform‑agnostic apps. 🌐 Most modern law‑focused SaaS platforms are built to be OS‑agnostic so they can serve both Windows and Mac firms with a single codebase, and they function similarly across Chrome, Edge, and Safari. That means the historical “Windows has all the legal software” argument is rapidly losing relevance for general practice, especially for solos and small firms that choose mainstream platforms over custom legacy systems.

The ABA Model Rules, however, keep this from being just a hardware shopping discussion. ABA Model Rule 1.1, and especially Comment 8, recognizes that competence now includes understanding “the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology.” That duty of technological competence does not require you to buy the most expensive device, but it does require you to make informed, reasonable choices about the systems you use to handle client information and conduct your practice. When you evaluate the Neo, you are not just deciding what laptop you prefer—you are deciding whether this platform lets you meet your obligations around confidentiality, reliability, uptime, and data handling in a way that is at least as competent as what you have on Windows.

Short‑term costs are where the MacBook Neo is most obviously attractive. At its launch price, it competes directly with mid‑range Windows laptops that often sacrifice build quality, thermals, or battery life to hit a number on the sticker. The Neo offers a brighter display, premium build, and Apple Silicon performance in that same price band, which can translate into less time fighting sluggish hardware and more time focused on client work. For a lawyer with limited to moderate tech skills, that smoother baseline experience can reduce friction, support better document handling, and lower the odds of user‑induced system instability. 🚀

Can Attorneys juggle a macbook Neo, their firm’s SaaS tools, and their ethical duties?

Mid‑term costs—three to five years—are where Apple’s supply chain and design decisions become relevant. Industry reports suggest that rising memory and CPU costs could force many Windows laptop manufacturers to push prices up sharply, while Apple’s long‑term supplier agreements help buffer its MacBooks from the worst of these increases. At the same time, the Neo introduces a more modular, repair‑friendly design than previous MacBooks, with lower out‑of‑warranty battery replacement costs, making mid‑life repairs less painful. For a law firm budgeting over the life of a device, this combination of more stable pricing and more manageable repair costs can make the total cost of ownership more predictable than a similarly priced Windows machine that may face steeper price hikes or cheaper construction.

Long‑term expenses involve more than just hardware. You must consider training, support, integration, and the risk of vendor lock‑in or disruptive platform changes. The Neo ties you more deeply into the macOS ecosystem, which can be a strength if you commit to it, but may introduce friction in a mixed Windows–Mac environment. On the Windows side, there are signs that Microsoft may move more aggressively toward subscription‑driven Windows licensing, especially for Pro editions, which could affect firms that rely heavily on Windows‑specific features. Lawyers already shoulder subscriptions for research services, practice management, and office suites, so a shift toward OS‑level subscription pricing could make the Mac’s relatively stable OS model more attractive over time.tech.

From an ethical perspective, the operating system decision intersects directly with data security and confidentiality. ABA technology‑competence guidance stresses that lawyers must understand the risks of the tools they use, including operating systems, cloud storage, and third‑party services. MacOS offers strong sandboxing, disk encryption, and built‑in security protections, but Windows has mature security controls as well, especially in managed environments. The real question is whether, given your own tech comfort level, can you configure and maintain a secure environment more reliably on Windows or macOS? For many small firms without dedicated IT, the Neo’s controlled hardware–software stack may reduce complexity and thereby reduce risk.(One added, but separate, benefit option is the availability to purchase AppleCare; this is Apple’s well-regarded extended warranty program, which can alleviate some of your concerns about future repairs.)

Still, the Neo is not a universal solution. If you are a litigator embedded in a court system that mandates Windows‑only e‑filing tools, if your firm uses an on‑prem Windows server that depends on Windows‑only integrations, or if you rely on specialized Windows‑only deposition or trial software, you will either need to keep a Windows machine in parallel or stay with Windows as your primary platform. Under Model Rule 1.1, knowingly moving to a platform that breaks critical parts of your workflow without a realistic workaround would raise competence concerns. In that sense, the Neos’s OS limitations force you to map your actual workflow—software, integrations, court requirements—rather than treating this as a purely personal preference decision.

can a lawyer leverage a macbook Neo and cloud platforms for secure practice?

So does the MacBook Neo qualify as a true “game changer” for lawyers sitting on the Windows‑to‑Mac fence? For a large subset of practitioners—especially solos and small firms who primarily use browser‑based SaaS tools, Microsoft 365, PDF software, and mainstream practice management platforms—the answer is increasingly yes. ✅ The Neo dramatically lowers the entry cost of joining the Mac ecosystem while offering a stable supply‑chain story and credible mid‑term repairability, all within a security model that can satisfy ABA technology‑competence expectations when used thoughtfully.

For others—those deeply tied to legacy Windows software or court‑mandated tools—the Neo may be more of a secondary device than a replacement. But even in those cases, its presence will pressure Windows OEMs to improve build quality, pricing transparency, and long‑term value, which benefits the legal profession regardless of which platform individual lawyers choose. In short, the MacBook Neo is less about abandoning Windows and more about forcing every lawyer to ask a more sophisticated, ethics‑aware question: which platform—Windows, Mac, or a hybrid—best supports competent, secure, and sustainable representation for my clients in the decade ahead?

MTC

Shout Out: Previous Podcast Guest Ruby Powers Invites Your The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page Blogger and Podcaster Back on Power Up Your Practice!

I recently had the honor of joining Ruby Powers on her Power Up Your Practice Podcast, and I could not be more excited about what we covered for fellow lawyers. We talked about legal podcasting as a practical, ethical, and highly effective way for attorneys to build visibility, deepen relationships, and modernize their marketing without needing to be “hardcore tech people.”

On Ruby’s show, I shared why I believe that podcasting is becoming the new networking standard for lawyers. When you regularly publish episodes—whether about your day-to-day practice, a niche topic, or even a related interest—you push your name and your ideas into the online world in a consistent way. Search engines and AI systems notice this. Over time, your name and your content start to surface more often when people search for your practice area, your type of work, or your expertise. That is real SEO, and it comes from steady, quality content rather than tricks or gimmicks.

Another reason I encourage lawyers to podcast is simple: your voice makes you more human. Listeners hear how you think and how you explain things. They hear your tone and your values. That goes far beyond a static bio or a profile page. Whether your audience is potential clients, referral sources, peers, or the broader public, a podcast lets them get to know you in a safe and scalable way. This is networking that keeps working for you even when you are in court, in a hearing, or taking a much-needed break. 🌟

I also understand that many lawyers hesitate because they are concerned about ethics. That concern is healthy. As attorneys, we cannot ignore ABA Model Rules and similar state rules when we put content into the world. On the podcast, Ruby and I discussed that while a show can be an excellent educational and marketing tool, we must avoid giving individualized legal advice and avoid accidentally creating an attorney–client relationship. I strongly recommend clear, prominent disclaimers that explain the podcast is for informational purposes only, does not create an attorney–client relationship, and should not be relied on as legal advice for any specific matter.

This aligns with our obligation of competence under Model Rule 1.1, which now includes understanding relevant technology, and with our duties around communications and advertising under Model Rules 7.1 and following. A well-run legal podcast respects those boundaries. It presents general information and insights, and it invites listeners to seek formal counsel if they need advice for their specific situation. When you treat your podcast as education plus relationship-building, not as a substitute for representation, you are already thinking in the right direction.

In our conversation, Ruby and I also addressed a common fear: “I’m not tech-savvy enough to start a podcast.” As someone known as the Tech-Savvy Lawyer, I want to be clear: you do not need to be a full-time tech enthusiast to do this. You likely already have access to most of what you need. A solid microphone, a decent camera, and a platform like Zoom, Riverside, or StreamYard can take you surprisingly far. Many of these tools are user-friendly and continue to improve. You can start with the basics and then layer on more sophistication as you grow more comfortable. 🎧

Ruby shared her own experience of initially overthinking her podcast. She wanted it to be perfect, and that almost stopped her from launching. I hear that from lawyers all the time. My advice is simple: do not wait for perfect. Your early episodes will probably make you cringe later, which means you are improving. That is a good sign. Focus on clear audio, honest content, and consistent scheduling. Over time, you can refine your editing, your format, and even your branding. You can bring in a contractor or a service to help with editing once you know you want to keep going.

We also discussed the flexibility podcasting offers. You can publish weekly, every other week, or monthly. You can create solo episodes where you explain key topics. You can host interviews with colleagues, experts, or community leaders. You can even experiment with live formats, where audience members submit questions in advance, and you answer them at a general, educational level. The format should fit your bandwidth, your goals, and your audience.

One concept I emphasized is the idea of an “ideal listener” or avatar. Before you hit record, think about exactly who you are speaking to. Is it a potential client in a specific practice area? Other lawyers in your niche? Law students or young practitioners? Having that profile in mind will guide your topic choices, your language, and your examples. It also helps you stay focused on value rather than drifting into random conversations that do not support your goals.

From a business perspective, legal podcasting can support your referral network in powerful ways. Colleagues can share your episodes, which subtly introduce you as a trusted resource. Prospective clients may listen to several episodes before they ever contact you, which means they arrive already familiar with your style and approach. That can shorten the trust-building curve and make consultations more productive.

What I appreciate about Ruby’s Power Up Your Practice platform is that it treats podcasting not as a vanity project, but as part of a larger ecosystem of law practice management, technology, and professional development. My appearance on her show gave me a chance to tie together what I see in my own practice, my blog, my podcast, and my book: lawyers do not need to fear technology. We need to engage with it thoughtfully, guided by the same ethics and judgment we apply in every other part of our work.

If you are a lawyer with limited to moderate tech skills and you have been on the fence about starting a podcast, I invite you to listen to my conversation with Ruby and let it serve as a practical, encouraging blueprint. You will hear that you are not alone in your concerns, that there are clear ways to stay compliant with ABA Model Rules, and that the path to becoming a “tech-savvy lawyer” does not require perfection—only willingness, consistency, and a focus on delivering value. 🚀

Enjoy!

MTC: Are Lawyers Really Ready for a Wallet‑Free Future? Digital Wallets, ABA Ethics, and the Reality of Going Fully Cashless 💳⚖️

Tech-savvy lawyers should not leave their physical wallets at home, BUT YOU CAN PROBABLY pare THEM down some.

When previous podcast guest David Sparks over at MacSparky shared his recent post about accidentally going out without his physical wallet—and still making it through the day just fine on his iPhone and Apple Wallet—it captured a quiet shift many of us in the legal profession are grappling with. He walked into his appointment armed only with a digital ID, digital insurance card, and Apple Pay, and everything worked. For a growing number of professionals, that is the new normal. The question for lawyers is more specific: not can we go wallet‑free, but should we—ethically, practically, and professionally—given our obligations under the ABA Model Rules?

Digital wallets are no longer niche tools reserved for tech enthusiasts. Apple Wallet and similar platforms have matured into robust ecosystems that can store payment cards, IDs, insurance cards, transit passes, and even car keys. They sit at the intersection of convenience, security, and risk. As attorneys, we have to examine that intersection with greater rigor than the average consumer, because our technology choices are framed by duties of competence, confidentiality, and client service.

The promise of a wallet‑free practice

On paper, the case for a full digital wallet is compelling. Digital payments can reduce friction at the courthouse café, client lunches, and bar events. Digital IDs eliminate worries about misplacing a physical card. Many platforms add layers of biometric security that traditional wallets can’t match. David notes that Apple Wallet has “been quietly getting better for years,” allowing storage of physical card numbers behind Face ID and making peer‑to‑peer payments a tap‑away. For a solo or small‑firm lawyer, that friction reduction compounds over time into real efficiency.

From a malpractice‑avoidance standpoint, a digital wallet can be safer than a billfold. Losing a traditional wallet means scrambling to cancel credit cards, monitoring for identity theft, and possibly dealing with unauthorized use of your bar ID or access cards. A lost phone, by contrast, can be located, remotely wiped, or locked with strong authentication. Properly configured, it can reduce risk rather than increase it.

This is where ABA Model Rule 1.1 on competence, particularly Comment 8, becomes relevant. The Comment notes that competent representation includes understanding “the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology.” A digital wallet is very much “relevant technology” for a modern practitioner. Choosing not to understand or use it, especially when it offers better security and traceability than analog methods, may itself become a competence question as the bar’s expectations evolve.

The gaps: cash, IDs, and access to justice

There are plenty of reasons not to go “cashless” when leaving home or the office.

Still, David’s hesitation—“there’s a part of me that still feels compelled to carry a small wallet with my driver’s license in it”—should resonate with lawyers. There are pockets of our professional lives where the ecosystem is not ready, and those pockets matter.

First, cash. Many lawyers still tip courthouse staff, parking attendants, baristas near the courthouse, and others in cash—including, in my case, using $2 bills (yes, they are still produced, still accepted, and can be obtained at many banks across the U.S. [At least as of the time of this posting]. I almost always get an excited smile when I tip my barista for his/her work with a $2 bill). Cash remains the lowest‑friction, most universally accepted “protocol” for small-scale human interactions. Refusing to carry any cash at all can put you in awkward social and professional situations, especially in older courthouses or local establishments that either do not take cards or resent micro‑transactions by card. For those committed to cash tipping as a personal or professional habit, a purely digital wallet is not yet a substitute.

Second, physical IDs. While TSA and some states are piloting and accepting digital IDs, acceptance is not universal, and the rules are in flux. David notes he has a state digital ID that “shows up nicely” in Apple Wallet. That is great—until you encounter an agency, judge, clerk, or officer who simply will not accept it. Not all jurisdictions recognize mobile driver’s licenses or digital IDs, and some procedures (e.g., certain filings or in‑person notarizations) still presume a physical, inspectable card. The risk is not hypothetical: show up with the wrong form of ID for a flight or a court security checkpoint, and you may face delay, additional fees, or outright denial of entry.

FROM TSA WEBSITE - “If you are unable to provide the required acceptable ID, such as a passport or REAL ID, you can pay a $45 fee to use TSA ConfirmID. TSA will then attempt to verify your identity so you can go through security; however, there is no guarantee TSA can do so.”

✈️ 🌎 ‼️

FROM TSA WEBSITE - “If you are unable to provide the required acceptable ID, such as a passport or REAL ID, you can pay a $45 fee to use TSA ConfirmID. TSA will then attempt to verify your identity so you can go through security; however, there is no guarantee TSA can do so.” ✈️ 🌎 ‼️

For lawyers, this is not just an inconvenience—it is a competence and diligence issue under Model Rules 1.1 and 1.3. If your failure to carry an accepted ID means you miss a hearing, delay a filing, or cannot visit a client, you have a professional problem, not just a tech annoyance. Likewise, local court rules and security policies may require a specific bar card or government‑issued ID to enter restricted areas. A digital ID on your phone will not help if the sheriff’s deputy at the door has not been trained or authorized to accept it.

Third, connectivity. A digital wallet that is fully dependent on live internet access is a fragile tool in old courthouses with thick stone walls, in rural jurisdictions, or during emergencies. Many modern digital wallets do allow offline transactions at NFC terminals using stored tokens, but not all. If your payment method, ID, or membership pass depends on a cloud verification step and you are in a dead zone—or your battery dies—you effectively have no wallet. Lawyers who rely on public transit, rideshares, or mobile office setups need to consider this in contingency planning, particularly when punctuality is essential.

Digital wallets and legal ethics

From an ethics perspective, digital wallets intersect with several core duties.

Under Model Rule 1.6, protecting client confidentiality extends to how you pay for and manage client‑related expenses. If you are using peer‑to‑peer payment apps or storing client‑related account details in a digital wallet, you must understand their privacy and data‑sharing practices. Some services expose transaction histories, social feeds, or metadata that could inadvertently reveal client relationships or matter details. Configuring strict privacy settings and separating personal from firm accounts is not optional; it is part of your duty of confidentiality.

Model Rule 1.15 on safekeeping property also comes into play if you ever use digital tools to handle client funds, reimbursements, or settlement distributions. While most bars still require traditional trust accounts and closely regulate payment processors, the trend toward digital payments will continue. Using any digital payment or wallet solution around client funds requires careful vetting, written policies, and—ideally—consultation with your malpractice carrier and bar ethics guidance.

Finally, Model Rule 5.3 on responsibilities regarding nonlawyer assistance extends to IT providers and wallet platforms. If your firm relies on third‑party providers to manage mobile device management (MDM), security, or payment integrations, you must make reasonable efforts to ensure their conduct aligns with your professional obligations. Managing digital wallets on firm‑owned or BYOD devices should be governed by a clear policy that addresses encryption, remote wipe, lock‑screen settings, and acceptable use.

Practical guidance: a hybrid, not a cliff

As advanced as our digital wallets are, the legal professional should carry a combination of digital and physical identification, means of payment, and cash!

Given these realities, are we “truly there” yet for lawyers to go fully wallet‑free? Not quite. For most practitioners, the prudent path is a hybrid approach:

  • Carry a slim physical wallet with a government‑issued ID, bar card (if used locally), a minimal backup payment card, and a small amount of cash for tipping and edge cases.

  • Use a digital wallet as your primary payment and convenience layer, especially in environments where it is well‑supported and secure.

  • Confirm, in advance, what IDs your courthouse, correctional facilities, and agencies accept, and do not assume your digital ID will suffice.

  • Harden your digital wallet: enable strong biometrics, ensure a reputable MDM or security solution manages any firm devices, and separate personal from professional payment flows where possible.

This hybrid approach aligns with Model Rule 1.1’s requirement to understand and responsibly adopt relevant technology while honoring the practical demands of courtroom work and client service. It allows you to benefit from the security and efficiency of digital wallets without betting your professional obligations on the most fragile parts of the ecosystem: universal acceptance and ubiquitous connectivity.

David ends his reflection by asking whether he will ever “truly go out knowingly wallet‑free” and whether he is alone in his hesitation. Lawyers should feel no pressure to be first in line to abandon physical wallets entirely. Our job is to advocate, counsel, and appear—on time, properly identified, and fully prepared. That may mean, for the foreseeable future, living comfortably in both worlds: with a well‑tuned digital wallet in your hand and a minimal, carefully curated physical wallet in your pocket.

MTC

TSL.P Labs 🧪 Initiative: Why 96% AI Accuracy Still Fails Lawyers: Ethics, Hallucinations, and the Future of the Billable Hour ⚖️🤖

📌 To Busy to Read This Week’s Editorial?

Welcome to the TSL Lab’s Initiative. 🤖 This weeks episode builds on my March 3rd, 2026, editorial “Even Though AI Hallucinations Are Down: Lawyers STILL MUST Verify AI, Guard PII, and Follow ABA Ethics Rules ⚖️🤖” is a misleading comfort blanket for lawyers, and how ABA Model Rules on confidentiality, competence, diligence, candor, supervision, and client communication must govern every AI prompt you run. Our Google LLM Notebook hosts translate the theory into practical workflows you can implement today—from document grounding and tokenization to vendor due diligence and line‑by‑line verification—so you can leverage AI confidently without sacrificing ethics, privilege, or your professional license.

You will hear how document grounding changes what LLMs actually do, why uploading active case files to cloud AI tools can quietly trigger Rule 1.6 problems, and how cross‑border data flows, vendor training rights, and retention policies can erode privilege if you do not negotiate them carefully. 🔐 We also unpack practical safeguards like tokenization, internal sandbox testing, and bright‑line “danger zones” where AI must never operate unsupervised—especially on open‑ended research, choice of law, and any task that turns statistical text into real‑world legal risk.

Finally, we confront the economic paradox: when AI can compress 100 hours of document review into seconds, but partners must still verify every line to protect their licenses, what exactly are clients paying for—and how does the billable hour survive? 💼

In our conversation, we cover the following

  • 00:00 – Why “96% fewer hallucinations” is still not good enough in law ⚖️

  • 01:00 – How the remaining 4% error rate can trigger malpractice, sanctions, and ethics violations

  • 02:00 – From IT issue to ethics issue: ABA Model Rules as the real constraint on AI adoption

  • 03:00 – Document grounding 101: turning a free‑floating LLM into a reading‑comprehension engine

  • 04:00 – The hidden danger of “just upload the file”: how Rule 1.6 confidentiality is instantly implicated

  • 05:00 – Cloud AI architecture, cross‑border data transfers, GDPR, and privilege risk 🌐

  • 06:00 – Model training nightmares: when your client’s trade secrets leak back out through someone else’s prompt

  • 07:00 – Negotiating no‑training clauses and ring‑fencing vendor data use (before you upload anything)

  • 08:00 – Tokenization explained: turning John Doe into “Plaintiff 01” without losing legal meaning 🔐

  • 09:00 – What AI does well today: grounded summarization, clause extraction, and playbook‑based redlines

  • 10:00 – The “danger zone” of tasks: open‑ended research, choice of law, and abstract legal reasoning

  • 11:00 – Phantom case law: how LLMs manufacture perfect‑looking but fake citations (and Rule 3.3 candor)

  • 12:00 – Sandboxing AI tools internally and measuring real‑world failure rates against known outcomes 🧪

  • 13:00 – Building bright‑line firm policies around forbidden AI use cases

  • 14:00 – Verification as a workflow, not a suggestion: what Model Rules 5.1 and 5.3 demand from supervisors

  • 15:00 – The efficiency paradox: when partner‑level verification erases associate‑level time savings ⏱️

  • 16:00 – Making AI verification as routine as a conflict check in your practice

  • 17:00 – Falling hallucination rates, rising risk: why better AI can still make lawyers more vulnerable

  • 18:00 – Client communication under Rule 1.4: when and why clients may be entitled to know you used AI

  • 19:00 – “You can delegate the task, not the liability”: Rule 1.2 and ultimate responsibility for AI‑assisted work

  • 20:00 – Treating every AI prompt and ToS as a potential ethics document

  • 📝21:00 – The existential question: if AI drafts in seconds, what exactly are clients paying lawyers for?

👉 Tune in now to learn how to stay tech‑forward without becoming the next ethics cautionary tale, and start designing AI policies that actually protect your clients, your firm, and your bar license.