AI-powered legal analysis
Insights

We Use AI Everywhere. We Trust It Nowhere.

Lisa Chen Lisa Chen | January 14, 2026

We use AI for legal work. Not as an experiment. As core infrastructure.

AI lets us review a 50-contract portfolio in hours instead of weeks. It doesn’t slow down at 2am before a deadline. That speed changes what’s economically possible. Work that used to be reserved for companies with €20,000 legal budgets becomes accessible at a fraction of that.

But AI doesn’t practice law. We do.

Where Humans Take Over

AI extracts information. It doesn’t know what the information means.

It can tell you a contract has a 6-month probationary period. It can’t tell you that the Tarifvertrag referenced in clause 12 overrides that period and extends notice requirements to 3 months. It doesn’t know what a Tarifvertrag is. It doesn’t know to look for one. We do. That’s the difference between a clean termination and an Arbeitsgericht case.

German law creates particular challenges that AI consistently misses. A contractor agreement that AI analyzed as standard actually described fixed hours, client equipment, full team integration. Classic Scheinselbständigkeit markers. AI doesn’t know what the Deutsche Rentenversicherung looks for. We do. The back-payments alone can sink a young company.

What AI Finds That Humans Would Miss

The relationship works both ways. AI catches things humans overlook. When you’re reviewing contract 47 of 50, your attention isn’t what it was at contract 1. AI doesn’t have this problem. Contract 47 gets the same attention as contract 1. Every clause checked against the same criteria. Every cross-reference verified.

In one portfolio review, AI identified that 12 of 50 contracts shared an unusual indemnity structure: uncapped liability for IP infringement, buried in a clause that looked standard on first read. A human reviewing sequentially might notice by contract 6 or 7. Might not. AI flagged it immediately, across the entire set.

What This Means For Cost and Speed

The combination changes the economics of legal work.

A 30-page German commercial agreement used to require 8-12 hours of attorney time. With AI handling extraction and cross-referencing, we spend our time on what actually requires judgment: German law application, business context, risk assessment. Same rigor. Different economics.

This isn’t about cutting corners. Nobody benefits from paying €400 an hour for someone to manually extract defined terms from a contract. That’s data entry, not legal judgment. We’d rather spend your budget on the parts that actually require a lawyer.

Why We Tell You This

Some firms treat their process like a trade secret. We think you should know how your legal work gets done. When you hire us, you’re not hiring a black box that produces documents. You’re hiring a specific combination: AI for speed and consistency, experienced attorneys for judgment and German law expertise. That combination is the product.

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