MTC: Perplexity for Legal vs. Lexis, Westlaw, and vLex Fastcase: What Today's Lawyers Need to Know About Reliability, Cost, and Ethics

Tech-savvy lawyers need to HARNESs AI legal research tools!

If you practice law in 2026 and you're even mildly AI‑curious, you've probably seen the recent announcement of Perplexity for Legal, Perplexity's enterprise offering designed specifically for law firms and legal teams. 🧠 Now the field is more crowded than ever: Lexis+ AI/Protege, Westlaw Edge/Precision, and vLex Fastcase with Vincent AI are all vying for a place in your workflow—and Perplexity is asking a provocative new question: do you even need the legacy companies anymore? For solo and small‑to‑medium firm practitioners, the real question is simple. How does each of these platforms serve you in daily practice, and how do you choose responsibly?

What Perplexity for Legal Actually Offers

Perplexity's legal-focused enterprise product is built around its core strengths: fast, cited answers, deep multi‑source research, and the ability to connect to your firm's internal knowledge bases. You ask a question, see sources inline, and move from a synthesized answer directly into primary authority—or into firm work product—without hopping across multiple systems.

Highlighted use cases include:

  • Staying current on legal developments across jurisdictions in real time.

  • Generating client‑ready research memos faster.

  • Drafting pitch materials and Request for Proposal responses by pulling context from internal documents.

Firms like Gunderson Dettmer report using Perplexity Enterprise to scale legal research on rapidly evolving topics such as emerging company financings and technology transactions. 🚀 Latham & Watkins uses it for market intelligence and tactical research. For solos and small firms, the benefit is more pragmatic: less time wrestling with search syntax, more time actually thinking like a lawyer.

If you're a regular reader and listener of The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page blog and podcast, we discuss this type of workflow can enhance your firm's productivity effectively and safely.

Meet the Field: Lexis, Westlaw, and vLex Fastcase

Before we stack Perplexity against the competition, it helps to understand what each incumbent actually is today—because the landscape has shifted considerably.

Lexis+ AI layers generative AI on top of LexisNexis's curated legal content and the powerful Shepard's citator. Its AI features are bundled into subscriptions that can run from the low hundreds to several hundred dollars per user per month, depending on coverage tier. Pricing is often opaque and driven by long-term contract negotiation rather than transparent published rates—a persistent frustration for small firms.

Westlaw Edge/Precision integrates Thomson Reuters' generative AI capabilities directly into the Westlaw research ecosystem, pairing them with KeyCite and deep editorial enhancements. Like Lexis, its pricing sits at the premium end of the market, and it is best suited for firms that already rely heavily on Westlaw's proprietary citator and editorial content.

vLex Fastcase is the most democratically accessible of the three. After Fastcase merged with vLex in 2023 and vLex was subsequently acquired by Clio, the combined platform now serves over one million lawyers nationwide through partnerships with 80+ state, county, and specialty bar associations—often as a free member benefit. At the heart of its AI offering is Vincent, vLex's AI legal assistant, which handles research, drafting, document analysis, and customizable workflows through a feature called Vincent Studio for enterprise teams. The platform's Cert citator flags negative treatment and authority, replacing the older Bad Law Bot, while AI Case Analysis generates automated headnotes and summaries. For many solos and small-firm practitioners, vLex Fastcase is effectively free through their bar membership—making it arguably the highest-value entry point in the market.

If you are a member of the Florida Bar, California Lawyers Association, Illinois State Bar, or any of the dozens of other partnered associations, you likely already have access to vLex Fastcase Premium (a $995/year value) at no additional charge.

Reliability: Can You Trust These Platforms for Legal Research?

today’s lawyers need to evaluate AI legal platforms, pricing, and ethics.

Reliability is the first concern I hear from lawyers when AI enters the conversation—something we cover on The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page. No AI platform is infallible, but they fail in different ways.

Lexis+ AI and Westlaw AI answer from within their proprietary, editorially curated databases. Their hallucination risk is constrained by the quality of their content backbones, but they can still misinterpret authority, overgeneralize from a line of cases, or overlook nuances between jurisdictions.

vLex Fastcase/Vincent answers from vLex's global legal database—over one billion searchable documents across 100+ countries—supplemented by its AI‑powered analysis layer. Vincent has performed strongly in independent AI benchmarking, including the Vals Legal AI Report and a comparative AI evaluation by law librarians. Its Cert citator provides direct verification, making it more trustworthy for authority checking than pure generative systems.

Perplexity for Legal draws from a broad web‑scale index plus any internal data you connect through the enterprise deployment. Its core reliability strength is the inline citation on virtually every statement—you can trace each claim back to a source immediately. Its Deep Research feature structures multi‑step investigations into organized reports with full sourcing. The honest limitation: Perplexity does not have a built-in citator or a curated legal content backbone like KeyCite or Cert. For final authority verification, you still need to confirm via Westlaw, Lexis, vLex Fastcase's Cert, or a reliable citator—no exceptions.

For all four platforms, the universal rule applies: AI answers are drafts, not final work product. Read the cases. Check the citations. Verify the authority. 📋

Ethics: ABA Model Rules and AI Research

Using any AI tool in legal practice implicates several ABA Model Rules, and the analysis is the same whether you use Perplexity, Lexis+ AI, Westlaw, or vLex Fastcase:

Rule 1.1 (Competence). Comment 8 requires lawyers to understand the benefits and risks of relevant technology. This means knowing how each tool generates its answers, where it can fail, and how to verify its output. You cannot delegate judgment to any AI—Perplexity, Vincent, or otherwise.

Rule 1.6 (Confidentiality). Enterprise deployments of Perplexity are designed to isolate firm data and not train public models on your inputs. vLex Fastcase, operating within the Clio ecosystem, also maintains firm-level data controls. Regardless of which platform you use, you must confirm the contractual and technical safeguards before loading confidential client information. Never use a consumer-grade tool without verified protections.

Rule 5.3 (Responsibilities Regarding Non-Lawyer Assistance). AI is, functionally, a non-lawyer assistant. You must supervise its use, review its output, and ensure that the work product it generates meets your professional obligations. Vincent Studio's custom workflows are an interesting development in this regard—they allow firms to embed review and compliance steps directly into AI workflows, which supports Rule 5.3 compliance by design.

Rule 1.4 (Communication). If AI tools materially change how you handle matters—especially in flat-fee engagements—consider whether to disclose that to clients. Doing so can build trust and align expectations.

These obligations are vendor‑agnostic. The ABA Model Rules care about your conduct, not your software logo. ⚖️

💰 Cost and Access: The Solo and Small‑Firm Reality

For solos and small‑to‑medium firms, cost is where decisions often get made. A realistic comparison in 2026 looks like this:

  • Lexis+ AI: Bundled AI features run roughly $125–$275 per user per month at the low to mid-tier; enterprise tiers go significantly higher. Opaque pricing and long-term contracts are common complaints.

  • Westlaw Edge/Precision: Premium pricing in the hundreds of dollars per month per user, with AI features integrated at the top tiers. Best suited for firms already embedded in the Westlaw ecosystem.

  • vLex Fastcase: Free to bar association members for the core plan, with a retail value around $995 per year. Vincent AI premium features (50-state surveys, drafting tools) require a paid upgrade, but bar members often get discounted access. For many solos, this is already sitting in their inbox—they just haven't activated it.

  • Perplexity for Legal (Enterprise): Enterprise pricing is generally more transparent and leaner than full Lexis/Westlaw stacks. Exact per-seat pricing varies by deployment, but it is positioned as an accessible AI layer rather than an all-in-one legal publisher.

    💡 Tip: Solos and Small Firms, check out if the Enterprise Pro plan meets you needs - Perplexity Enterprise Pro runs a fraction of the cost of Lexis+ AI or Westlaw Precision—platforms that can run $125–$275 per user per month or more—making it one of the most cost-competitive AI research tools available to solo and small-firm practitioners today.

The practical calculus for solos and small firms:

  • If you already have Lexis or Westlaw, Perplexity can complement them for early-stage research, cross-domain intelligence, and drafting.

  • If you have vLex Fastcase through your bar, you already have a solid free primary law backbone with built-in AI. Pairing that with Perplexity Enterprise gives you AI synthesis capabilities across web-scale sources at a potentially lower total cost than upgrading to premium Lexis or Westlaw AI tiers.

  • If you are starting from scratch, the vLex Fastcase bar benefit plus a Perplexity Enterprise subscription may deliver more value per dollar than any single legacy vendor stack. 💸

That is not a recommendation to ditch Lexis or Westlaw wholesale—their curated content and citator infrastructure remain industry benchmarks. It is a recommendation to audit what you actually use and design a deliberate stack around it.

A Practical Framework for Choosing and Using These Tools

tech-savvy lawyers need to compare modern ai- vs legacy- legal research tools.

  • Keep Lexis/Westlaw if you heavily use KeyCite/Shepard's, proprietary treatises, or sophisticated editorial enhancements.

  • Activate vLex Fastcase through your bar if you haven't already—it's free for most practitioners and now includes genuine AI capabilities via Vincent.

  • Use Perplexity for Legal for early-stage issue spotting, multi-jurisdiction surveys, cross-domain research, and AI-assisted first drafts of memos and correspondence.

  • Anchor everything in the ABA Model Rules:

    • Competence: know how each tool works and where it fails.

    • Confidentiality: enterprise deployments only, with verified data protections.

    • Supervision: treat all AI output as a first draft to be reviewed and verified.

  • Write an internal AI use policy specifying which tools are authorized, for which tasks, and how outputs are verified and documented.

The question is never "Which one wins?" It's "How do I build a balanced, ethical, cost-conscious research stack that serves my clients well?" That's what it means to be a truly tech-savvy lawyer. 💼

🎙️ Ep. 139, From MyCase to Claude: Building a Secure, AI-Ready Tech Stack for Solo and Small Law Firms.

My next guests are Gabriella "Gabby" Cabero, Senior Vice President of Product at 8am — the powerhouse behind MyCase, LawPay, CASEpeer, and DocketWise — and Majo Castro, founder and managing attorney at CastroMand Legal in Austin, Texas. 🌟 Gabby is a 16-year legal tech veteran who co-founded CASEpeer and now drives product strategy across one of the most widely adopted law practice management platforms in the country. Majo is a Venezuelan-born cybersecurity and AI attorney whose solo firm helps growing companies navigate AI implementation, data management, and cybersecurity — and she writes about all of it on her Substack, The Cyber Law Gal. 🛡️ This is a no-fluff, peer-to-peer conversation about the exact workflows that separate a modern LPM from a liability, why the Data Processing Agreement is the most important acronym in your practice right now, and what your employees are almost certainly already doing with AI — whether you've approved it or not.

Join Gabriella Cabero, Majo Castro, and me as we discuss the following three questions and more!

  1. What are the top three integrations or workflows a solo, small, or midsize firm should expect from a modern cloud-based LPM platform like 8am — and what's missing that signals a real red flag around efficiency, cash flow, or security?

  2. As AI gets baked into cloud LPM tools like 8am, what are the top three day-to-day tasks that will change most for solo and small firm lawyers — and what basic security or ethical guardrails should they put in place to use those AI features without putting client data at risk?

  3. For solo and small firms without a CISO or CTO, what are the top three cybersecurity mistakes you see over and over again?

In our conversation, we cover the following:

  • [00:00:00] 🪝 Show Hook — Gabby's critical warning: if your firm hasn't "adopted" AI, your employees probably already have — on free consumer tools

  • [00:00:00] Title read — Episode 139

  • [00:01:00] Host intro: why this conversation goes tactical on AI, security, and LPM workflows

  • [00:02:00] Guest introductions — Gabriella Cabero (8am/MyCase) and Majo Castro (CastroMand Legal / The Cyber Law Gal)

  • [00:03:00] Majo celebrates 1.5 years as a solo practitioner 🎉

  • [00:03:00] Ad: Five-star review request for The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page

  • [00:03:30] Tech setups — Gabby's MacBook Air (M4 chip), iPhone Max, Slack, Zoom, Google Drive, Claude Enterprise

  • [00:06:00] Gabby's portable USB-C external monitor for travel (Amazon, highest-rated)

  • [00:09:00] Majo's MacBook Pro 14" M4 (16GB RAM), performance issues, upgrade path discussion

  • [00:10:00] Michael recommends Onyx (free Mac maintenance utility); Michael's Mac Studio M3 Ultra with 256GB

  • [00:11:00] Mac Mini and Mac Studio as desktop alternatives; MacRumors Buyer's Guide tip

  • [00:13:00] Apple Business Account benefits — small discounts + white-glove service

  • [00:15:00] Majo's full setup: iPhone 16 Pro Max, Google Workspace + Gemini (team account with DPA), DJI Osmo Pocket 3, Hollyland wireless mic

  • [00:16:00] Q1: Top three LPM workflows — intake, secure client communication (client portal), and getting paid (trust accounting + automated invoicing)

  • [00:19:00] Majo on switching from QuickBooks to MyCase after discovering QuickBooks mishandles trust accounting

  • [00:20:00] 🎉 Gabby announces: AI case summary features are now LIVE in 8am/MyCase

  • [00:21:00] Cloud vs. local access debate — SaaS uptime, SLAs, and asking vendors for proof

  • [00:23:00] Michael's redundant backup strategy: Backblaze + Dropbox + local Mac Mini

  • [00:25:00] Cautionary tale: ransomware attack converts a server-based firm to the cloud overnight

  • [00:28:00] Majo's Google Drive third-party backup with 2-hour recovery window

  • [00:29:00] Q2: How AI changes daily workflows — drafting, case summaries, surfacing critical info fast

  • [00:30:00] Why reading vendor Terms of Service and activating Data Processing Agreements (DPAs) is non-negotiable

  • [00:31:00] 8am's SOC 2 Type 2 compliance; updated AI terms and opt-in controls coming

  • [00:32:00] SOC 2, HIPAA, end-to-end encryption as baseline vendor security requirements

  • [00:34:00] AI as the great equalizer — leveling the playing field for solo firms vs. BigLaw

  • [00:35:00] Majo's real data: ~12 hours saved last month across 27 consultations using Gemini for proposals

  • [00:36:00] Plaud and Pocket AI recording devices — data retention, PII, and DPA concerns

  • [00:37:00] Majo's stance on wearable AI recorders; Apple Watch comparison; one-party vs. two-party consent

  • [00:39:00] Plaud's terms say no AI training — but it's not a DPA; terms can change without notice 🚨

  • [00:40:00] Google Workspace DPA must be manually activated — most users don't know; creating user friction around protection

  • [00:41:00] Q3: Top cybersecurity mistakes — shadow AI, no MFA, undertrained employees

  • [00:42:00] Majo's checklist: DPA + no model training on client data + enterprise/team-tier subscriptions + MFA

  • [00:43:00] Gabby: employees are the #1 security risk; fractional IT and CISO options for small firms

  • [00:44:00] AI-powered phishing attacks on law firms will only intensify

  • [00:45:00] Majo's training method: positive AI policies + 45-second staff video explainers 🎬

  • [00:46:00] 🚨 Gabby's shadow AI reminder (Show Hook callback): audit your tech stack — your team already has

  • [00:47:00] Episode originally recorded at ABA Techshow; re-recorded after a technical snafu 😅

  • [00:47:00] Where to find Gabby: LinkedIn, X, 8am.com, Kaleidoscope conference (September — banner at 8am.com)

  • [00:48:00] Where to find Majo: LinkedIn (Majo Castro), CastroMand Legal, Substack: The Cyber Law Gal

  • [00:48:30] Outro — michaeldj@thetechsavvylawyer.page | next episode in ~two weeks

RESOURCES

Connect with Gabriella "Gabby" Cabero

Connect with Majo Castro

Mentioned in the Episode

Hardware Mentioned

MTC: Why Rising PC and AI Tool Prices (for Windows and Apple) Should Be on Every Lawyer’s Radar in 2026

Law firms need to plan Windows, Mac, and AI refresh strategy

If you feel like every new laptop quote is 15–20% higher than last year, you are not imagining things. 📈 And if your favorite AI drafting or transcript tool pinged you with a “small” price adjustment this spring, welcome to the club. 🤖

In our December 2025 editorial, “MTC: The 2026 Hardware Hike: Why Law Firms Must Budget for the ‘AI Squeeze’ Now!”, we warned that a perfect storm in the hardware market was forming: DRAM shortages, surging AI infrastructure demand, and shifting trade policy were about to push PC prices up by 15–20% in 2026. 💻 Then, in April 2026’s “MTC: Why 2026’s PC Price Hikes Put Law Firms at Risk (and Why Many Lawyers Are Quietly Switching to Macs)”, we explored how rising Windows laptop prices were reshaping law firm hardware decisions and eroding the old assumption that “Windows is always cheaper than Mac.”

Those forecasts are now reality across both Windows PCs and Macs, and the question I keep hearing from solo and small firm lawyers is simple: Should I be worried?

The short answer is yes—concerned, not paralyzed. The better question is: how do we respond strategically, in a way that respects both our budgets and our ethical obligations under ABA Model Rules 1.1 (Competence) and 1.6 (Confidentiality)?

A quick recap: what’s driving the price surge?

Let’s start with the “why,” because context matters when you sit down with your next-year budget spreadsheet. 📊

Industry analysts now confirm that average PC prices are rising in the 15–20% range for 2026, with memory costs as the biggest driver. AI data centers—those massive server farms powering tools like ChatGPT and other LLMs—are soaking up an estimated majority of advanced DRAM production, leaving less capacity for business laptops and desktops of all flavors, whether they run Windows or macOS. When memory becomes scarce and expensive, everything that relies on it gets pricier.

You can see this in both ecosystems:

Lawyers need t plan their 2026 law firm hardware budget amid rising costs

  • Windows side: In April, Microsoft sharply raised prices across its Surface lineup, including the Surface Pro and Surface Laptop families, many lawyers rely on. Entry-level machines that once started under 1,000 dollars now begin well above that mark, with some configurations jumping several hundred dollars over launch prices and in some cases exceeding roughly comparable MacBook configurations.

  • Apple side: In June, Apple CEO Tim Cook told The Wall Street Journal that Apple will raise prices because the company can no longer absorb skyrocketing memory and storage costs, calling the situation a “hundred-year flood” and saying he has “never seen anything like it in any area in over 40 years,” describing these increases as “unavoidable.” Apple to Raise Prices Due to Memory Chip Crunch, Tim Cook Says.

When both Microsoft and Apple are telling you that memory costs and component shortages are forcing them to push prices up, that is not a platform rivalry story. It is a signal that the entire hardware market—Windows and Mac alike—is being repriced around the AI era.

On top of that, trade policy and tariffs have increased costs for components and final assembly in key manufacturing hubs like China and Taiwan. Vendors have responded by tightening quote windows and baking in risk premiums, which is why the Windows laptop or Mac you priced in Q4 2025 quietly jumped in Q2 2026. 💸

In “MTC: The 2026 Hardware Hike”, we urged firms to accelerate planned refreshes where possible, prioritize RAM over storage, and budget for stronger machines instead of downgrading specs. In the April 2026 editorial, we drilled into how those same forces made some Mac configurations look surprisingly competitive—and why lawyers should stop treating “Windows versus Mac” as a matter of habit and start treating it as a structured evaluation tied to performance, security, and ethical duties. All of that guidance still holds.

Budgeting like a law practice, not a gadget hobby (PC‑neutral framing)

The theme of “MTC: The 2026 Hardware Hike” was simple: treat your tech like a planned, recurring investment—not a last-minute scramble when a laptop dies in the middle of trial prep. The April 2026 follow-up on PC price hikes showed how that planning must now account for both Windows and Mac options, since price gaps have narrowed or flipped depending on configuration.

Here is the approach I recommend for solos and small firms, regardless of platform:

  1. Inventory and classify your devices across platforms.
    Capture which users are on Windows, which are on macOS, and what roles those machines play. Prioritize devices used for active litigation, client communications, and high-sensitivity matters.

  2. Set a realistic refresh cycle that is OS‑aware.
    For most law practices, a 3–5 year cycle for primary laptops and desktops is reasonable, but the exact timing should reflect each platform’s support timeline—Windows 10 reaching end of support, macOS versions aging out, and vendor firmware commitments.

  3. Budget for “competence grade” hardware on both sides.
    As we argued in both the December and April MTC pieces, it is better to buy fewer, well‑specced machines—whether that is a mid-range Surface Laptop or a MacBook Air with sufficient RAM—than to chase the absolute lowest price and end up with systems that choke under AI‑enhanced workflows.

  4. Run a structured Windows vs. Mac evaluation, not a loyalty contest.
    Following the April article’s recommendation, build a simple matrix comparing specific Windows and Mac models on price, RAM, storage, performance, security features (like Secure Boot, Secure Enclave, or TPM), support life, and compatibility with your core practice software. Tie that matrix explicitly to your responsibilities under ABA Model Rules 1.1 and 1.6 so you can show you exercised reasonable diligence.

  5. Cull redundant subscriptions before sacrificing baseline hardware on either platform.
    Before you decide that “Macs are too expensive now” or “Windows machines are out of reach,” examine your monthly AI and SaaS spend. Many firms can free up budget for better Windows or Mac hardware by retiring overlapping tools that deliver marginal benefits.

This is not about declaring a winner in the Windows vs. Mac debate. It is about recognizing that both ecosystems are affected by the same structural forces—AI‑driven memory demand, supply constraints, tariffs—and that your ethical obligations apply regardless of logo. ⚖️

So, should lawyers be worried? (PC‑neutral conclusion)

Concern is justified. Panic is not. 😅

Law firmS of every size need to plan Windows, Mac, and AI refresh strategy

Yes, Windows PC and Mac prices are rising and are likely to remain elevated through at least 2027, given ongoing DRAM constraints and AI demand. Yes, AI and cloud tools are adjusting their pricing and tiers in ways that can catch an unprepared firm off guard. And yes, when Microsoft raises Surface prices, and Tim Cook says he has never seen a memory crunch like this in over 40 years and calls it a “hundred-year flood,” those are market‑wide signals—not platform‑centric marketing talking points.

But you still have levers to pull, no matter which platform you use:

  • Plan your hardware lifecycle instead of reacting to failures.

  • Prioritize “competence grade” devices and security over optional features, whether that is a mid‑range Windows laptop or a MacBook with enough RAM.

  • Rationalize your AI and SaaS stack so you pay for what actually moves the needle.

  • Treat your tech stack as part of your ethics compliance, not just overhead. ⚖️

Lawyers on both Windows and Mac should treat 2026’s hardware and AI price hikes as a market‑wide issue that affects competence, confidentiality, and client service—not as a referendum on one platform. 💻⚖️

MTC

How (To) Lawyers Can Write Better AI Prompts (In Minutes) with PromptCowboy 🤠

today’s Lawyer need to master AI prompts in a modern tech-savvy law office 📚🤖

Large language models (LLMs) are not magic wands. They are very fast, very convincing parrots. When you ask sloppy questions, you get sloppy answers. When you ask clear, structured questions, you start to see real value in your law practice.

That’s why prompt quality is now a lawyering skill, not a party trick—and tools like PromptCowboy can help you build that skill quickly and safely.

In earlier Tech-Savvy Lawyer posts like “🎙️ TSL Lab’s Deep Dive into Our May 18, 2027, editorial, “AI Won’t Replace Solo and Small Firm Lawyers. It Will Supercharge Them”!” and podcast episodes discussing AI workflows, I’ve stressed the same core message: you cannot delegate your professional judgment to an LLM. You can, however, use an LLM to accelerate competent lawyering—if you stay in control of the instructions you give it and the outputs you accept.

Why prompt quality is an ethics issue 💼

The ABA’s technology competence mandate under Model Rule 1.1 now clearly extends to understanding the risks and benefits of generative AI tools. ABA Formal Opinion 512 emphasizes that lawyers may use generative AI to deliver faster and more efficient legal services, but only if they maintain independent professional judgment, supervise results, and comply with duties of confidentiality, candor, and reasonable fees.

That means “prompt engineering” is not a hobby; it’s part of staying reasonably informed about relevant technology and using it responsibly. When you use a tool like PromptCowboy to structure your prompts, you are not outsourcing judgment—you are standardizing how you exercise it.

What PromptCowboy actually does for lawyers 🤠⚖️

PromptCowboy is a guided prompt generator. You type in a rough idea (“help me sanity-check a demand letter” or “summarize this deposition transcript for trial prep”), and it walks you through targeted questions that transform that rough idea into a structured, reusable prompt.

For lawyers, three capabilities matter most:

  • It enforces structure: role, task, context, constraints, and output format.

  • It preserves prompts: you can reuse, tweak, and standardize prompts across matters and teams.

  • It supports multiple LLMs: you can paste the same prompt into your preferred tools (e.g., a legal-specific AI plus a general LLM).

If you’ve ever stared at a blank chat box and thought, “I don’t even know how to ask this,” PromptCowboy is the bridge between your legal brain and the AI chat window.

Why not just type directly into the LLM? 🤔

If you’re comfortable drafting a tight brief from a messy client email, you can learn to write good prompts directly in ChatGPT, Claude, or your preferred tool. The question is not “Can I?”—it’s “Is that the best use of my time and attention?”

PromptCowboy sits between your legal brain and the AI chat box and gives you three advantages that are hard to get from freehand prompting alone.

1. It forces you into best practices by default

Most prompt-engineering guides tell you: be specific, define the role, give context, specify the audience, and tell the model what format you want. When you type straight into an LLM, you have to remember all of that and translate your legal problem into structured instructions.

PromptCowboy automates that discipline:

  • It asks targeted follow-up questions about audience, use case, and output format.

  • Its “improve your prompt” style features can take your “lazy prompt” and suggest refinements, like adding jurisdiction, tone, or specific constraints.

  • It then assembles a complete, structured prompt you can copy into your LLM.

From an ethics standpoint, this matters because better-structured prompts reduce the risk of vague, misleading, or overconfident AI outputs that you might otherwise overlook—helping you meet your competence duty under Model Rule 1.1 and the quality expectations outlined in ABA Formal Opinion 512.

2. It gives you reusable, auditable prompt “precedent”

When you type directly into a chat window, your “good prompts” disappear into the scroll unless you remember to save them elsewhere. Lawyers would never run a litigation practice without templates and prior forms, yet many start from scratch every time they open an AI tool.

PromptCowboy provides:

SOLO AND Small-firm attorneys CAN COMPETE WITH LARGER FIRMS BY CREATING POWERFUL AI prompt templates for clients ⚖️💬

  • Prompt history and private templates in its paid tiers, so you can reuse and iterate on prompts like you do with forms.

  • Centralized prompt management, so a firm can standardize prompts for common tasks (client email drafts, discovery checklists, status updates) and keep everyone using the same baseline instructions.

  • A clean separation between “prompt drafting” and “AI execution,” which makes it easier to document how you instructed the AI if you ever need to explain or audit your process.

That last point goes to Model Rules 5.1 and 5.3—supervision of lawyers and nonlawyer assistants—because LLMs function in practice like a highly automated, but still supervised, assistant. Having standard prompts you can review, update, and roll out to a team is much easier with a dedicated prompt tool than with a dozen scattered screenshots.

3. It speeds up the “iterate and improve” loop

Good prompting is iterative. You try, you see what the AI produces, you refine. That’s true whether you’re drafting in a word processor or prompting an LLM.

PromptCowboy accelerates that loop because:

  • It can generate an initial, detailed prompt from a very short description (“help me draft a discovery checklist for a Virginia PI case”).

  • It automatically suggests follow-up questions whose answers will sharpen the prompt, instead of making you guess what to change.

  • Once refined, you can save that prompt and reuse it as a starting point next time, instead of reinventing the wheel in the LLM chat.

The net effect is less cognitive load. You spend your time reviewing outputs and exercising legal judgment, not handcrafting prompts from scratch—which aligns with the efficiency and cost considerations in Model Rule 1.5 and the access-to-justice benefits emphasized in Formal Opinion 512.

When direct prompting is fine—and when PromptCowboy shines

To keep this honest: there are plenty of scenarios where you can safely type straight into your LLM, like one-off low-stakes tasks or conversational exploration.

PromptCowboy shines when you:

  • Want repeatable workflows (weekly client updates, discovery outlines, intake summaries).

  • Need team-wide standards for how AI should behave and respond.

  • Must document your process for internal policies, insurers, or regulators who may ask how you controlled AI outputs.

Think of typing directly in the LLM as scribbling notes on a legal pad in chambers; using PromptCowboy is more like drafting a form in your document system that the whole firm can rely on.

A simple framework: RICE + I (Role, Instructions, Context, Expectations + Inputs) 🧩

The RICE framework—Role, Instructions, Context, Expectations—is a practical way to structure prompts. Let’s add an explicit “I” for Inputs and walk through how PromptCowboy helps you implement it:

  1. Role – Who is the AI supposed to be?
    Example: “You are a legal writing coach familiar with U.S. civil procedure.”
    PromptCowboy prompts you to define this persona up front, narrowing the output.

  2. Instructions – What task should it perform?
    Example: “Identify ambiguities and tone issues in the following demand letter and suggest specific edits.”

  3. Context – What background does it need?
    Example: “Maryland state court personal injury case involving a rear-end collision, liability admitted, issue is damages only.”

  4. Expectations – How should it respond?
    Example: “Return a bullet-point list, no more than 10 bullets, written at a 10th-grade reading level.”

  5. Inputs – What materials can it see?
    Example: “You will receive the text of the demand letter below this prompt.”

PromptCowboy’s workflow essentially walks you through each of these steps, so you don’t have to remember them every time.

Step-by-step: Building a better legal prompt with PromptCowboy 🛠️

Solo practitionerS CAN craft ethical AI prompts with ABA-focused guidance 🧠📜

Let’s say you want an LLM to help you draft initial discovery requests in a straightforward personal injury case—without crossing ethical lines.

Step 1: Decide what you will do first
Under Model Rule 1.1 and Formal Opinion 512, you must understand the law and facts well enough to supervise any AI assistance. That means you:

  • Identify the jurisdiction and claims

  • Review your client’s key facts

  • Decide what categories of information you need

Only then should you move to the AI.

Step 2: Open PromptCowboy and describe your task in plain English
In PromptCowboy, start with a simple description:

“Help me generate draft interrogatories and requests for production for a rear-end auto collision case in Virginia state court, focusing on damages.”

Step 3: Answer PromptCowboy’s clarifying questions
PromptCowboy will ask for details like:

  • Target audience (you, another lawyer, or a client)

  • Preferred tone (formal, plain language, bullet-point)

  • Output format (numbered list, table, outline)

By answering these questions, you naturally fill in the RICE + I elements without overthinking the jargon.

Step 4: Add ethical guardrails into the prompt
This is where ABA Model Rules meet prompt engineering:

  • Model Rule 1.6 (confidentiality) and Formal Opinion 512 suggest you should avoid disclosing client-identifying information to public LLMs unless you have informed consent and appropriate safeguards.

  • So in the prompt, you write:
    “Do not invent case-specific facts. Use only the generic facts provided. Do not reference any real persons or entities.”

PromptCowboy can store that language so you reuse it in future prompts.

Step 5: Generate, copy, and paste into your chosen LLM
Once PromptCowboy assembles the prompt, you copy it into:

  • A general LLM (e.g., ChatGPT, Claude or Perplexity*) for plain-language drafting, or

  • Your firm’s legal AI platform for case-specific workflows.

Then you review the output like you would a first-year associate’s draft—carefully and critically.

Practical prompt examples you can reuse 🧾

Here are two PromptCowboy-friendly templates you can adapt:

Template 1: Research sanity-check (non-confidential)

“You are a legal research assistant familiar with [jurisdiction].
Task: Summarize the general legal standards for [issue] without citing specific cases.
Context: This is for high-level planning, not court submission.
Expectations: Provide a concise outline with headings and bullet points.
Ethics: Do not fabricate statutes or case names; flag any uncertainty for follow-up research.”

Template 2: Plain-language client explanation (with safeguards)

“You are a communication coach for lawyers.
Task: Rewrite the following explanation of [legal issue] so a layperson can understand it.
Context: This will be used as a draft for a client email.
Expectations: 3–5 short paragraphs, no legalese, no promises of outcomes.
Ethics: Do not add any new legal advice beyond what is given. Flag any unclear sections for attorney review.”

These templates align with Model Rules 1.1 (competence), 1.4 (communication), and 7.1 (avoiding misleading statements), while using PromptCowboy to enforce structure and consistency.

Common mistakes PromptCowboy helps you avoid 🙅‍♂️

PromptCowboy is not a substitute for judgment, but it does reduce some predictable errors lawyers make with LLMs:

  • Vague requests (“Write a brief” with no jurisdiction, facts, or audience)

  • No output format (you get a wall of text you can’t use)

  • Hidden assumptions (AI fills in facts that are wrong or prejudicial)

  • Over-sharing (don’t paste client-identifying facts into a public tool)

By forcing you to specify intent, context, and output, PromptCowboy nudges you toward more disciplined, repeatable AI use.

Bringing it into your practice today 📆

If you are a solo or small firm lawyer, you do not need a full-blown “AI strategy deck” to start. You need one or two well-crafted, reusable prompts for tasks you already handle every week—email drafting, checklists, or content summaries.

📢 Stay Tuned! In a future episode of The Tech-Savvy Lawyer Podcast, we’ll walk through a live PromptCowboy-to-LLM workflow and compare results across different tools. For now, pick one use case, build a prompt with PromptCowboy, and run it through your existing AI stack. Measure whether it saves you time without sacrificing quality or ethics.

Used thoughtfully, PromptCowboy can help bridge the gap between “AI-curious” and “AI-competent”—and that’s exactly where the profession needs to go next. 🚀

Why Macstock 2026 Should Be on Every Tech-Savvy Lawyer’s Calendar (and How to Save $50 with My Code) ⚖️💻

macstock 2026 will be held july 10, 11 & 12, 2026!

If you’re a solo, small-firm, or AI‑curious lawyer who lives in the Apple ecosystem, Macstock 2026 is one of the few conferences that genuinely respects both your time and your tech stack. It’s a three‑day, community‑driven, Apple‑centric event where you can sharpen your skills with your Mac, iPhone, and iPad, and walk away with workflows you can actually deploy on Monday morning.

This year, I’m honored to be speaking at Macstock X on “Podcasting with Apple: From Idea to Launch Using the Gear You Already Own.” We’ll take a practical walk through planning, recording, and publishing a professional‑quality podcast using the same devices you already carry into court, client meetings, and your home office. Whether you want to build a niche show for veterans’ benefits, family law, or small‑business compliance—or simply become a more confident guest on other podcasts—this session is designed to be accessible, concrete, and repeatable. 🎙️

What Makes Macstock Different (and Why Lawyers Should Care)

Macstock isn’t a generic tech expo with a handful of Apple sessions bolted on; it’s an independent, Apple‑focused conference built for people who actually use Apple gear every day. The attendees range from first‑time Mac users to seasoned creators, but everyone shares a common goal: get more from Apple hardware and software without drowning in jargon.

For attorneys, that matters. You’re not trying to become an IT professional. You want to:

  • Capture and organize evidence more efficiently on your iPhone. 📱

  • Draft, annotate, and sign documents on your iPad when you’re away from the office.

  • Automate repetitive tasks on your Mac so you can spend more time on advocacy and less on admin.

learn how to use your mac to podcast!

Macstock’s sessions, hallway conversations, and Creator Camp tracks are all geared toward real‑world workflows—exactly the kinds of workflows I talk about on The Tech-Savvy Lawyer podcast and blog, including episodes like Ethical AI, Paperless Practice, and Smart Hardware Choices with ABA LTRC Chair Alan Klevan ⚖️🤖 and similar deep‑dives into ethical tech use.

A Time-Sensitive Deal: Save $50 and Support The Tech-Savvy Lawyer

Let’s talk about timing and value. You can use my code TECHSAVVYLAWYER at checkout to save $50 on your Macstock Weekend Pass or Creator Camp Bundle. If you’ve been thinking, “I should go to Macstock one of these years,” this is that year.

For every person who uses the code, Macstock provides me a $25 referral fee. That means:

  • You pay $50 less for a weekend of Apple‑centric, workflow‑rich content.

  • You directly support The Tech-Savvy Lawyer blog and podcast, including future episodes and tutorials.

The code TECHSAVVYLAWYER is not case‑sensitive and is valid through July 8, 2026.

How Macstock Helps You Meet Your Ethical Tech Duties

your The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page Blogger and podcaster will be presenting at Macstock x!

Macstock is not marketed as a legal tech conference, but it naturally supports your professional obligations under the ABA Model Rules.

  • Competence — Model Rule 1.1 (Comment 8): You have a duty to keep abreast of the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology. Learning how to securely use Apple devices for uses like document management, client communication, and evidence handling goes directly to your duty of technological competence.

  • Confidentiality — Model Rule 1.6: Many sessions at Macstock touch on system settings, backups, and secure workflows. Understanding how to configure your Apple devices to minimize unauthorized access, especially when using cloud sync and third‑party apps, strengthens your compliance with confidentiality obligations.

  • Communication — Model Rule 1.4: Clear, timely communication often depends on your ability to reach clients where they are—email, secure messaging, or even video updates. The more confidently you use your Apple tools, the more reliably you can keep clients informed.

If there is not a session directly addressing your questions, there are many enthusiastic, friendly attendees and speakers happy to try to help you and your Apple computer needs! 🤗

On The Tech-Savvy Lawyer blog and podcast, we frequently link these ethics points to real tools and scenarios—just as we did in episodes exploring AI, deepfakes, and metadata in digital evidence—and Macstock is a natural extension of that mindset.

Why Lawyers Should Care About Podcasting with Apple

Podcasting can be more than a marketing buzzword. Done right, it can be:

  • A client education channel that answers common questions before they become billable emergencies.

  • A way to build authority in a niche practice area—veterans’ benefits, immigration, special education, you name it.

  • A platform to interview judges, experts, and colleagues in a way that strengthens professional relationships.

My Macstock session, “Podcasting with Apple: From Idea to Launch Using the Gear You Already Own,” is focused on practical, lawyer‑friendly steps. We’ll talk about using your iPhone as a primary microphone, recording with your Mac, organizing episodes in iCloud, and editing in approachable tools—no audio engineering degree required. If you enjoy my conversations with guests on The Tech-Savvy Lawyer podcast, this session will show you what it takes to stand behind the mic yourself.

Community, Not Just Content

One of the things I appreciate most about Macstock is the community. People go back year after year not only because the sessions are strong, but because the hallway track, shared meals, and evening conversations provide real, candid problem‑solving time.

For lawyers—especially solos and small‑firm practitioners—this kind of peer‑to‑peer exchange is invaluable. You’ll find people who:

  • Have already solved a workflow you’re struggling with.

  • Are willing to share templates, shortcuts, and practical advice.

  • Understand the pressure of balancing client work, marketing, and a life outside the office.

If you’ve listened to episodes like my MacVoices “Road to Macstock” appearance in 2024, you’ve heard how much I value that human side of legal tech and Apple tech events.

Ready to Join Me at Macstock?

If you’re serious about making your existing Apple gear work harder for your practice—without overwhelming your staff or your budget—Macstock 2026 is worth the trip. You’ll return with actionable workflows, renewed confidence, and a clearer sense of how to align your technology use with your ethical obligations.

Just don’t wait:

  • Sign up at https://macstockconferenceandexpo.com/register/

  • Use code TECHSAVVYLAWYER (not case‑sensitive) for $50 off your Macstock Weekend Pass or Creator Camp Bundle.

  • For every use of the code, I receive a $25 referral fee that helps sustain The Tech-Savvy Lawyer content you rely on.

I look forward to seeing you at Macstock X— and hopefully hearing your voice in the podcasting space soon. 🎧⚖️

MTC: From Shingles to SEO to GEO: The History of Lawyer Advertising and the Ethics That Still Govern It

From hanging a shingle to GEO-driven law firm visibility!

If you listen only to today’s marketing jargon, you might think lawyer advertising started with SEO (Search Engine Optimization) and ends with GEO—Generative Engine Optimization. In reality, the story begins with word of mouth, a wooden shingle, and a profession that worried about dignity long before anyone worried about keywords. The tools have changed repeatedly, but the ethical backbone has stayed remarkably consistent.

The ABA didn’t adopt the Model Rules of Professional Conduct until 1983, yet the core prohibitions we now see in Rules 7.1, 7.2, and 7.3—no false or misleading communications, limits on advertising, and restrictions on solicitation—simply codified principles that were already there. As we move from classic SEO into GEO, those same principles should still keep us grounded, especially for solos and small firms tempted to let AI do too much of the talking. 🤖

Before the Codes: Reputation and Norms

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, there was no ABA Model Rule 7.1, no Model Code, and no national advertising standard. Lawyers built practices through referrals, courthouse reputations, civic involvement, and the quiet endorsements of former clients. Marketing was informal and relational, but that didn’t mean it was unregulated; courts and local bars still sanctioned dishonesty, fraud, and improper solicitation.

What we now call “communications concerning a lawyer’s services” was mostly face-to-face, but the expectation was already clear: do not lie, do not overreach, and do not exploit people at vulnerable moments. Those instincts would later become structured into the Canons, the Model Code, and ultimately the Model Rules.

1908–1969: Canons and the Shingle-to-Directory Transition

The ABA adopted the Canons of Professional Ethics in 1908, its first national ethics code, drawing heavily from an 1887 Alabama code and other local precedents. The Canons emphasized dignity, restraint, and loyalty to the client—not revenue at any cost. Advertising was generally discouraged, but basic identification (your name, that you were a lawyer, and where you could be found) was tolerated.

This is the era of “hanging a shingle”—literally putting up a sign that said you were an attorney—and later of simple listings in early directories and the White Pages. The shingle and the simple listing are analog ancestors of your Google Business Profile today: name, practice, contact information. 🪧 The message was informational, not boastful, which is exactly the line modern Rule 7.1 tries to maintain.

Yellow Pages and the Rise of Display Advertising

Lawyer advertising evolution: referrals, Yellow Pages, SEO, and GEO

As the telephone spread, lawyers moved from the White Pages into the Yellow Pages, and that’s where things changed. Yellow Pages display ads offered space for slogans, graphics, and bold type. By the late 20th century, they were one of the most important consumer marketing channels for lawyers, especially in personal injury, family law, and criminal defense.

During much of this period the profession was governed by the Model Code of Professional Responsibility (adopted in 1969), which carried forward the Canons’ skepticism of overt advertising. Some bars attempted to maintain near-blanket bans on lawyer ads, while others allowed limited, highly regulated Yellow Pages entries. The underlying concern, however, was familiar: Advertising that created unjustified expectations, promised results, or made unverifiable “best lawyer” claims was considered unethical—an early expression of what would become the Model Rule 7.1 prohibition on false or misleading communications.

Bates and the Birth of Modern Lawyer Advertising

Everything shifted in 1977 when the Supreme Court decided Bates v. State Bar of Arizona. The Court held that lawyer advertising is commercial speech protected by the First Amendment, striking down a state disciplinary rule that effectively banned ads by lawyers. The Court recognized that consumers need information about legal services and cannot evaluate lawyers if they are kept in the dark.

Bates did not remove ethical guardrails. It confirmed that states may still prohibit false, deceptive, or misleading advertising and may impose reasonable rules to protect the public. In modern terms, Bates opened the door to lawyer advertising but left the profession responsible for staying on the right side of truthfulness, clarity, and fair dealing.

1983–Present: Model Rules, the Web, and SEO

In 1983, the ABA replaced the Model Code with the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, which remain the baseline for state rules today. Three provisions matter most for marketing:

  • Model Rule 7.1 – A lawyer shall not make a false or misleading communication about the lawyer or the lawyer’s services.

  • Model Rule 7.2 – Lawyers may advertise through various media, subject to 7.1 and restrictions on paying for recommendations.

  • Model Rule 7.3 – Governs solicitation of clients, especially direct, real-time contact with people who may be vulnerable to undue influence.

When law firms began building websites in the 1990s and early 2000s, those sites were simply new “media” under Rule 7.2 and subject to the same truthfulness requirements as a print ad. As SEO emerged, lawyers learned to optimize pages for terms like “car accident lawyer” or “divorce attorney near me,” and local search became the new Yellow Pages.

The temptation, then as now, was to let the algorithm drive the ethics. Yet nothing in the Model Rules says “this doesn’t count if you’re trying to rank.” Every meta description, headline, and testimonial remains a communication about your services under 7.1.

Remember, your website is your biggest ethics footprint. If an SEO consultant suggests language you would never put in a sworn pleading, it probably doesn’t belong on your homepage either.

GEO: Generative Engine Optimization

Comparing classic law firm SEO with modern GEO AI answers

Fast-forward to 2026, and many law firm marketers are talking about GEO—Generative Engine Optimization. GEO focuses on making your content understandable and trustworthy to AI-driven answer engines (ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Bing Copilot, Google AI Overviews, and similar tools), not just to traditional search rankings.

Where SEO primarily asks, “How do I rank in the list?”, GEO asks, “When a prospective client asks a natural-language question, does an AI system understand my firm, recognize my authority, and cite my content accurately in its answer?” For law firms, GEO strategies generally include:

  • Structuring content around clear questions and answers clients actually ask

  • Strengthening entity profiles so AI can correctly associate attorneys, practice areas, and locations

  • Enhancing trust signals: consistent directory listings, complete bios, reviews, and citations from reputable sources

  • Updating content for depth, context, and semantic clarity so generative systems don’t misinterpret your guidanc

If that sounds like “SEO with better structure and more discipline,” you’re not wrong. GEO builds on strong traditional SEO, not replaces it.

Ethically, the message is straightforward: AI is just another channel. If your content is misleading, overbroad, or exaggerated, it does not become acceptable because it is being summarized by a generative engine instead of displayed as a blue link. Rule 7.1 applies regardless of whether a human or an AI is reading your copy.

GEO, AI Tools, and Model Rule Guardrails

For solos and small firms, GEO often intersects with increasing use of AI tools to draft or refine marketing content. That raises several recurring ethics touchpoints:

  • Truthful content (Rule 7.1): Any AI-assisted copy that inflates your experience, implies special certification you don’t actually hold, or hints at guaranteed outcomes violates the same rule as if you wrote it manually.

  • Supervision and review (Rules 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3): Ethics guidance on AI marketing emphasizes human review protocols: lawyers must review AI outputs for accuracy, tone, and compliance before publishing.

  • Solicitation concerns (Rule 7.3): If a GEO-driven workflow extends into chatbots, proactive outreach, or personalized sequences, you must ensure the system isn’t effectively engaging in real-time solicitation of individuals facing stress or duress.

GEO is powerful, but it’s not magic. It does not relieve you of the duty to understand the technology and to ensure that every public-facing statement about your services is accurate and appropriate for the audience.

The Through-Line: What Has Stayed the Same

Lawyer advertising evolution: referrals, Yellow Pages, SEO, and GEO

Once you understand the timeline—no Model Rules in 1890, no GEO in 2000—the continuity becomes obvious:

  • The codes changed; the core idea did not. From unwritten norms to the Canons, the Model Code, and the Model Rules, the message is consistent: tell the truth, don’t mislead, and respect client vulnerability.

  • Every new channel inherits the old duties. Yellow Pages, websites, SEO, AI answers, and GEO all fall under the same prohibitions on false or misleading communications and improper solicitation.

  • Technology amplifies both good and bad. Clear, helpful content that respects the rules will travel farther through generative systems; sloppy or overstated claims will too.

For tech-curious lawyers, the takeaway is simple: be excited about GEO, but not starstruck. ✨ Use it to structure better answers, not to stretch the truth. Let AI and generative engines distribute your expertise, not redefine your ethics.

MTC

BOLO: Microsoft Just Dropped Its Biggest Patch Tuesday Ever — Why Lawyers Must Update Windows Right Now! 🛡️

Lawyers should up their Windows products now — protect your client data from cyber threats!

If you are a lawyer and your Windows machine is sitting there, unpatched, you are not just leaving your front door unlocked — you are handing a master key to anyone who wants it. On June 10, 2026, Microsoft released what security researchers are calling the largest Patch Tuesday in the company's history — fixing 206 to 211* security vulnerabilities across WindowsOfficeSharePointExchangeDefenderBitLockerAzure, and more. That number is not a typo. The 12-month average for a typical Patch Tuesday hovers around 100 fixes. This month, Microsoft doubled it.

The Numbers That Should Get Your Attention 📊

Here is what landed in June 2026's update package:

  • 206–211* total vulnerabilities patched — the largest Patch Tuesday release ever recorded

  • 32–37* rated Critical — the most critical fixes in a single release, ever 54 Remote Code Execution (RCE) vulnerabilities — up from an average of ~26 per month 66 Elevation of Privilege vulnerabilities

  • 3 publicly disclosed zero-days — bad actors knew about these flaws before Microsoft patched them

  • 3 separate vulnerabilities rated CVSS 9.8 out of 10, all exploitable over the network with no user interaction required

Let those last four words sink in: no user interaction required. An attacker does not need you to click a phishing link or open a malicious attachment. They just need your machine to be reachable on a network — and your Windows installation to be unpatched.

The Vulnerabilities That Matter Most to Law Firms ⚠️

CVE-2026-47291 is a Critical RCE vulnerability in HTTP.sys rated CVSS 9.8, flagged "Exploitation More Likely," affecting all versions of Windows in mainstream support from Server 2016 through Windows 11. No privileges. No user interaction. Directly in the crosshairs: firms running web-facing client portals or remote desktop services. 🎯

CVE-2026-41091, affecting Microsoft Defender itself, is marked Exploitation Detected, Weaponized, and Publicly Aware . When your antivirus has a vulnerability that is already being actively weaponized in the wild, every hour you delay patching is an hour of unnecessary exposure.

CVE-2026-44815, a CVSS 9.8 RCE in the DHCP Client Service, and CVE-2026-50508, a Windows NTLM Spoofing vulnerability flagged "Exploitation More Likely," round out the priority list for law firms using Windows domain authentication.

The Secure Boot Factor: A Slower-Moving Risk 🔐

lawyers update your Windows security shield to block zero-day attacks on law firms!

Separate from the Patch Tuesday rush, June 2026 marks an important Secure Boot certificate transition. The certificates shipped inside Windows since 2011 are being replaced with new 2023-dated certificates valid until 2038. Microsoft is rolling these out through normal Windows Update, but some older devices need a BIOS firmware update from the manufacturer before the transition can complete. If your firm runs machines built before 2024, open Windows Security → Device Security → Secure Boot and verify the status text — not just the color. Microsoft warns that a green checkmark alone does not confirm the new certificates have been applied.

🚨This Is an Ethics Issue. Full Stop. ⚖️

ABA Model Rule 1.1 requires competent representation, and Comment 8 explicitly extends that duty to include "the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology”.  Staying abreast of a historic, record-breaking security release is not optional — it is the standard. ABA Model Rule 1.6 requires lawyers to make "reasonable efforts to prevent the inadvertent or unauthorized disclosure of, or unauthorized access to, information relating to the representation of a client". Running unpatched software on machines holding client files is almost certainly not "reasonable." Formal ethics opinions across multiple jurisdictions have made clear that annual technology assessment, patching, and investing in updated software versions are baseline expectations. ABA Model Rule 5.3 places the supervision obligation squarely on the supervising attorney — if you manage a firm and your IT vendor has not deployed these patches, that exposure lands on you.

The ABA now considers "reasonable cybersecurity" an ethical requirement under Rule 1.6. A record-breaking, 200+ vulnerability patch release is exactly the kind of event the ABA had in mind.

How to Update Right Now (Three Minutes or Less) ⏱️

You do not need IT for this:

be a Tech-savvy lawyer and secure your law firm’s networks with timely updates!

✅ Click Start → Settings (gear icon)

✅ Select Windows Update

✅ Click Check for Updates

✅ Download and install everything that appears

✅ Click Restart now when prompted

✅ Return to Windows Update and verify "You're up to date"

If you manage other attorneys or staff, send this post to them right now. Contact your IT vendor today and request written confirmation that June 2026 Patch Tuesday updates have been deployed across all firm devices.

The Bottom Line 🔑

This is the biggest patch release in Microsoft's history. It includes actively exploited vulnerabilities, three CVSS 9.8 flaws requiring no user interaction, and a Defender vulnerability already in the wild. For solo practitioners and small firms — statistically among the most targeted and least-defended organizations in the legal sector — this update is not background noise. It is a call to action. Be tech-savvy. Protect your clients. Protect your license. Update your machines. 💪

🎙️ Ep. 138: How US Legal Support Integrates AI, Security, and Remote Depositions into Your Litigation Tech Stack ⚖️💻

use AI transcript review to streamline complex deposition analysis!

My next guest is Jimmy Bridwell of US Legal Support, a Houston‑based litigation support company that manages depositions, record retrieval, trial technology, and graphics generation for law firms nationwide. In this post, we dive into how US Legal Support blends security, integration, and AI‑driven tools to help solos, small firms, and AM Law practices modernize their tech stack, streamline discovery, and run more effective remote depositions.⚖️💡

Join Jimmy Bridwell and me as we discuss the following three questions and more!

  • What are the top three ways lawyers should expect companies like US Legal Support’s technology platforms — whether remote deposition solutions, transcription services, or document management — to integrate seamlessly into a law firm’s existing tech stack to eliminate duplicative data entry and streamline trial preparation?

  • What are the top three technology investments or skillsets that lawyers consistently overlook, but would dramatically improve their practice efficiency and client services in 2026?

  • Based on US Legal Support’s experience facilitating over 245,000 remote events annually, what are the top three technology mistakes you see lawyers making during remote depositions or virtual proceedings, and how can they course correct to deliver more efficient client representation?

In our conversation, we cover the following

  • [00:00:00] Jimmy’s personal tech stack: Surface Pro laptop, 47‑inch curved Samsung monitor, HyperCast microphone, and Logitech Brio camera in a Microsoft‑based environment with Microsoft Cloud.

  • [00:00:45] Managing dual smartphones (Apple for work, Android for personal) and why Apple’s security posture matters in litigation and device holds.

  • [00:01:20] How US Legal Support uses Apple computers in graphics studios while the broader organization runs on Microsoft infrastructure.

  • [00:02:00] Defining the first big question: how vendors like US Legal Support should integrate with law firm tech stacks to prevent duplicate data entry.

  • [00:02:15] Why integration, security, and data management form the core triad for any law‑firm‑to‑vendor data exchange.

  • [00:03:00] The importance of a single, trusted first input for case data so humans aren’t re‑keying information across multiple systems.

  • [00:03:40] Inside US Legal Support’s security model: SOC 2 Type 2, HIPAA, NIST protocols, Microsoft and Amazon cloud, and internal security validation.

  • [00:04:40] Concrete questions lawyers should ask prospective vendors about encryption, security reviews, and penetration tests.

  • [00:06:00] Data breach reporting expectations and the need for a clearly published, timely incident response framework.

  • [00:07:30] Data management and access: preventing unauthorized secondary use of client data and guaranteeing 24/7 access to discovery and litigation documents.

proper ai use can help prevent chaotic Zoom deposition versus calm litigation!

  • [00:08:30] Integration patterns: standardized vs customized APIs, multipoint data flows, and the importance of vendor integration experience with law firm case management tools.

  • [00:11:00] Reframing overlooked tech investments and skills, with an emphasis on AI‑powered transcript review in 2026.

  • [00:11:15] How AI‑assisted transcript review condenses multi‑day depositions into summarized, keyworded, and key‑point‑driven outputs for faster strategy decisions.

  • [00:12:20] Why AI hallucination risk is lower when models work directly from the underlying deposition record.

  • [00:14:10] AI‑assisted deposition tools: secure portals that ingest exhibits and records, identify pre‑existing conditions, output outlines, and suggest deposition questions.

  • [00:15:40] Comparing legacy OCR workflows to today’s generative AI tools and how template‑free extraction speeds up discovery.

  • [00:17:00] Evaluating partners with holistic litigation solutions versus piecemeal, point‑solution vendors.

  • [00:18:00] The maturation of the litigation support market from small shops with thin tech budgets to larger organizations with in‑house dev teams.

  • [00:19:10] Why US Legal Support favors transactional BPaaS pricing over long subscription contracts in a fast‑moving tech landscape.

  • [00:22:00] Common mistakes in remote depositions, including heavy reliance on general meeting tools like Zoom for litigation‑specific workflows.

  • [00:22:10] Litigation‑ready platforms vs. meeting tools: exhibit management, date stamping, annotations, real‑time feeds, and AI enhancements.

  • [00:24:00] The evolution of case management platforms from generic workflow systems to highly tuned legal solutions.

  • [00:26:00] Emerging horizon tools, including facial recognition and facial sentiment analytics for remote proceedings.

  • [00:26:40] The long‑tail impact of COVID: remote depositions moving from nearly 0% to roughly 60–70% of proceedings, and how that forced adoption changed lawyer attitudes.

  • [00:27:30] Internal adoption challenges in medium and large firms: inconsistent processes, under‑used tech, and the operational cost of “every lawyer does it differently.”

  • [00:29:00] Applying manufacturing‑style process discipline to law firm workflows while respecting attorney autonomy.

  • [00:30:00] Where to find US Legal Support online and how they serve clients across the United States.

RESOURCES

Connect with Jimmy Bridwell

lawyers make sure your cloud platforms are SOC 2, HIPAA, NIST‑compliant!

  • US Legal Support: https://www.uslegalsupport.com

Hardware mentioned in the conversation

Software & Cloud Services mentioned in the conversation