I recently had the privilege of speaking to an audience of judges of the New York Supreme Court Commercial Division at Fordham Law School’s Eileen Bransten Institute on Complex.
To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog:
The COVID-19 pandemic taught the legal community that technology can be deployed to effectively serve clients and resolve disputes remotely, if necessary. Suddenly stripped of their ability to meet in-person, lawyers and courts rapidly adopted technology to meet their professional obligations.
But as the country emerges from COVID-19 and restrictions on travel and in-person meetings are gradually lifted, a new series of questions seems certain to arise: Are there circumstances in which lawyers must use technology in their practices? Specifically, is technology a requirement when its use will save clients time and money?