Monthly archives: May, 2026

Trump Administration’s Continued War Against Science, Research, Public Health and the Rule of Law – Part 9

This article is the ninth in a series by Sabrina I. Pacifici focused on the Trump administration’s unrelenting policy of attacking science, healthcare, public health, and the rule of law. The cornerstone of this series are topical highlights on hundreds of anti-government actions conducted by this administration. The greater goal of the series is to identify the consequences of these actions to shatter the health and welfare of our nation – terms broadly used to encompass our nation’s democracy. Together these articles form an actionable pathfinder to identify what must be restored or recreated and relaunched, when we commence the hard work of rebuilding our government.

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Congress, Free Speech, Freedom of Information, Government Resources, Health, Healthcare, KM, Leadership, Legal Research, Medical Research, United States Law

Tracking hallucination marketing claims from legal tech vendors

Damien Charlotin tracks the claims made by some LegalTech vendors in the past and today with respect to how they handle hallucinations from their offerings. Charlotin is relying on internet-based written marketing material, trying to highlight the changes in how these products are and were presented. The main vendors were a bit more cautious he thought though most still overclaimed in this respect and eventually backtracked, at least implicitly.

Subjects: AI, KM, Legal Profession, Legal Research, LEXIS

Deep Coverage

Right now the dominant AI strategy in law is using AI to replace or augment human labor on work product. Document review. Contract analysis. Research. First drafts. The logic is straightforward: if AI can do in minutes what an associate does in hours, the firm gets more efficient, margins improve, and clients eventually get lower costs. Every elite firm is running this play. Almost none has reckoned with where it ends. Josh Kubicki⁠ proposes an innovative, actionable and success driven deep coverage alternative that re-frames the institutional infrastructure around both the partners and the clients.

Subjects: AI, Education, Law Firm Marketing, Legal Marketing, Legal Profession, Legal Research, Management

LLRX May 2026 Issue – Articles and Columns

Trump Administration’s Continued War Against Science, Research, Public Health and the Rule of Law – Part 9 – This article is the ninth in a series by Sabrina I. Pacifici focused on the Trump administration’s unrelenting policy of attacking science, healthcare, public health, and the rule of law. The cornerstone of this series are topical highlights …

Subjects: KM

AI in Finance and Banking May 31, 2026

This semi-monthly column by Sabrina I. Pacifici highlights news, government documents, NGO/IGO papers, conferences, industry white papers and reports, academic papers and speeches, and central bank actions on the subject of AI’s fast paced impact on the banking and finance sectors. The chronological links provided are to the primary sources, and as available, indicate links to alternate free versions. Seven highlights from this post: The Optimal Use of AI in Financial Regulation; Inside Claude’s rapid expansion across corporate finance; What Real-Time Risk Looks Like. AI enables risk assessment at the speed of the business; Vendor Lock-In and AI: The Risk Banks Aren’t Pricing; The geography of AI firms; I’m the CEO of Goldman Sachs. The AI Job Apocalypse Is Overblown; and OpenAI gives Japan banks access to latest model, Japan’s finance minister says.

Subjects: AI in Banking and Finance, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Economy, Financial System, Legal Research

Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, May 29, 2026

Privacy and cybersecurity issues impact every aspect of our lives – home, work, travel, education, finance, health and medical records – to name but a few. On a weekly basis Pete Weiss highlights articles and information that focus on the increasingly complex and wide ranging ways technology is used to compromise and diminish our privacy and online security, often without our situational awareness. Five highlights from this week: Peter G. Neumann, Who Warned of Computer Security Risks beginning in 2010, Dies at 93; California Sues Owner of Former 23andMe; Troops’ phones leaked location data to foreign adversaries; FBI Warns Companies About Ransom Gang’s Fake IT Support Tactics; and Crypto Security Pioneer: ‘I Now Consider All of Decentralized Finance Unsafe’.

Subjects: AI, Cryptocurrency, Cybersecurity, Healthcare, Privacy

The form asked my permission to share my health data. Then it wouldn’t let me say no.

Over the last year, Alex Rosenblat, Director of Sociotechnical Research, The Markup, interviewed more than 20 patients, healthcare providers, experts and advocates about the privacy forms they must sign to get care at their providers’ offices. Time and again she was told the same thing: Across the country, from large hospital systems to small, private clinics, patients are being asked to sign waivers blindly without knowing exactly what they’re signing. When patients ask to see more, staff usually don’t have an easy way to show them. When patients do get the forms, it tells them all the ways their medical data will be shared and reused, and some of the ways patients can refuse. But electronic systems make it impossible to opt out on the spot, requiring follow up emails. Records sharing between unaffiliated providers through these networks can benefit patients by making their scattered records more visible to the provider who is treating them. But it can also harm patients.

Subjects: Big Data, Healthcare, Legal Research, Privacy

AI interviewers can’t connect with people the way human researchers can – they can produce only data, not meaning

Kelley Cotter, Ankolika De and Priya C. Kumar are researchers who specialize in qualitative research on digital technologies. Collectively, they have decades of experience developing, conducting and publishing interview studies, and they teach qualitative research methods to undergraduate and graduate students. While AI tools can support social science research, they also have significant limitations. Not taking these limitations into account risks undermining the unique value of research that relies on human connection.

Subjects: AI, Communications, Education, Internet Trends, KM, Legal Research, Technology Trends

Do we absorb information better on paper, rather than screens? It depends on the screen.

Erik D Reichle, Professor of cognitive psychology, Macquarie University and Lili Yu, Senior Lecturer, Cognitive Psychology, Macquarie University ask us to acknowledge the critical fact that reading might appear to be an easy task, but this impression is false. Reading is arguably the most difficult task one must learn – one that requires years of formal education and practice to master. In contrast to spoken language, it is a skill we are not biologically predisposed to learn. As digital reading has overtaken reading print books and journals, this research dovetails with increasing dominance of AI in education and the work place.

Subjects: Education

Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, May 23, 2026

Privacy and cybersecurity issues impact every aspect of our lives – home, work, travel, education, finance, health and medical records – to name but a few. On a weekly basis Pete Weiss highlights articles and information that focus on the increasingly complex and wide ranging ways technology is used to compromise and diminish our privacy and online security, often without our situational awareness. Five highlights from this week: OpenAI Shared Your Chats with Meta & Google, Lawsuit Claims; FBI Wants to Buy Nationwide Access to License Plate Readers; YouTube Opens AI Deepfake Detection Tool to All Adult Users; Lawmakers warn data protection rules don’t protect key sites; and Google’s Spam Policies Now Apply to Attempts to Manipulate AI.

Subjects: AI, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Legal Research, Privacy, Search Engines, Social Media