Original Reddit post

I feel kind of weird saying this, but AI is currently the best thing that ever happened to my law firm. I’ve never had this much work. Not even close. And no, it’s not because AI is replacing lawyers. It’s the opposite. It’s because suddenly everyone is building AI products. People are vibe coding SaaS tools over a weekend, launching them, and only then realizing: “wait… are we violating the EU AI Act?” Or they start a company with zero agreements in place, things blow up two months later, and now they need a lawyer to clean up the mess. Honestly, half my current workload exists because people are moving faster than they understand the consequences. So right now, AI is basically generating an insane amount of legal work: compliance, founder disputes, liability issues, you name it. At the same time, I’m pretty convinced a big chunk of legal work will be automated within a few years. Which creates a weird situation: AI might be giving lawyers their busiest years right before making a lot of them obsolete. submitted by /u/Lucylucyeth

Originally posted by u/Lucylucyeth on r/ArtificialInteligence