Stop experimenting and start using ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Copilot to automate your daily legal workflows safely.

AI has become an essential element of modern legal practice, offering faster drafting, more efficient research, streamlined communications, and improved client service. But the landscape is crowded, confusing, and evolving quickly. Lawyers must understand not just what these tools can do, but how to use them ethically, safely, and effectively.
In this one-hour session, we’ll examine the AI tools that are shaping legal practice globally — including ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Microsoft’s Copilot — and discuss how to evaluate them against key legal obligations such as confidentiality, data protection, privilege, accuracy, and professional conduct rules. You’ll learn which workflows lawyers can safely automate, where human review is essential, and how to choose tools that genuinely enhance (not undermine) legal work.
This session is designed for solicitors, in-house counsel, advocates, barristers, and legal professionals worldwide who want a grounded, practical understanding of AI in legal practice.

Technology and Data lawyer || Partner at Ashfords LLP
David is a partner in Ashfords' Technology and Data team, specialising in commercial technology transactions, digital business and services, data protection and AI governance issues, cybersecurity and the development, implementation and exploitation of new technologies. With more than 15 years of experience, David has worked with some of world's largest and most successful technology companies. He also advises clients in the energy and utilities, data centre, real estate, retail, financial services, healthcare, manufacturing and digital creative sectors, and has a strong interest in working with emerging high-growth technology businesses. He advises on complex and business-critical digital transformation projects, IT outsourcing, technology contracts, the creation, protection and commercial exploitation of intellectual property, data and digital content, software development and licensing, digital marketing and advertising, cloud and other IT services agreements, online safety issues, data protection, e-privacy, IoT, connected devices, and cybersecurity issues, including advising in relation to live cybersecurity incidents. He also has extensive experience working on the commercial, technology, data and intellectual property aspects of corporate transactions, with a particular focus on businesses in the technology and healthcare sectors. David has been recognised by both Chambers and Legal 500 in the areas of IT law and data protection. David co-authored the inaugural Chambers and Partners guide to Artificial Intelligence law, practice and development in the UK. Prior to joining Ashfords, David was a partner at Burges Salmon. David has previously worked at US firm Morrison & Foerster and trained at Allen & Overy. He is a member of the Society of Computers and Law and the International Technology Law Association.