TSL Labs 🧪 Bonus: Deep Dive on our April 27, 2026, Editorial, MTC: Smart Recording, Client Secrets, and HeyPocket: What Every Lawyer Needs to Know in 2026 📱⚖️

📌 To Busy to Read This Week’s Editorial?

Join us for an AI-powered deep dive into the ethical challenges facing legal professionals in the age of generative AI. 🤖 In this episode, we unpack how AI note takers and “always-listening” devices can quietly route client secrets to third-party vendors, why that matters under the ABA Model Rules, and how a 2026 federal decision out of the Southern District of New York turned one defendant’s AI chats into discoverable evidence. Whether you are a solo practitioner, in-house counsel, or a tech-curious professional in another field, this conversation will help you balance convenience with confidentiality and avoid turning your favorite AI assistant into your biggest evidentiary risk.

👉 Before your next client meeting, listen to this episode, check out our editorial, and run your current AI tools through the checklist we outline—then subscribe and share with a colleague who is still “just trusting the app.” 🎧

In our conversation, we cover the following:

  • 00:00 – The “ambient microphone” problem: phones, smart speakers, wearables, and connected cars as a continuous surveillance layer around client conversations.

  • 01:00 – How technology competence has shifted from locking file cabinets to understanding data custody, cloud routing, and API-driven services.

  • 02:30 – What makes AI note takers like HeyPocket different from passive telemetry and why capturing the spoken “payload” changes the threat model.

  • 04:00 – The invisible “third party in the room”: routing privileged audio through external AI models and the malpractice risk of default “Allow” clicks.

  • 05:30 – Applying ABA Model Rules 1.1 and 1.6 to AI workflows: competence, confidentiality, and “reasonable efforts” in a world of automated transcription.

  • 07:00 – Risk-based analysis from ABA Formal Opinions 477R and 498: weighing sensitivity, likelihood of disclosure, and available safeguards before using AI.

  • 08:30 – Why secretly recording clients or opponents with AI tools can implicate Rule 8.4(c), even in one‑party consent jurisdictions.

  • 10:00 – Inside United States v. Heppner (SDNY 2026): how public generative AI platforms destroyed privilege and work-product protections for a criminal defendant.

  • 12:00 – How AI training and tokenization work, why “military‑grade encryption” does not save privilege if terms of service allow internal data use.

  • 14:00 – Treating every AI note taker like an outsourced e‑discovery vendor: NDAs, retention policies, security audits, and data destruction timelines.

  • 16:00 – Practical minimization strategies: defaulting to no recording, segmenting AI-generated content by matter, and restricting access via role‑based controls.

  • 17:30 – Establishing bright-line “no‑AI” categories (criminal defense, internal investigations, sensitive family/immigration, high‑value trade secrets).

  • 18:30 – Counseling clients not to “prep their case” with public chatbots after Heppner and why this is now part of competent representation.

  • 19:30 – Building a simple vendor-vetting checklist for law firms and professional practices adopting AI note takers.

  • 20:00 – Looking ahead: when failure to use secure, vetted AI may itself become a competence issue due to inefficiency and overbilling.

  • 21:00 – Rethinking privilege in a world where an algorithmic “third party” is always in the room and devices are never truly off

RESOURCES

Mentioned in the episode