There are 7 new articles and 6 new columns in the April 2026 issue of LLRX.
- YIKES! The Bluebook’s Generative AI Is Flawed – Book Review by Prof. Jessica R. Gunder
- Book Review – How To AI: Cut Through The Hype. Master The Basics. Transform Your Work – In the current publishing cycle, books about AI are being produced at a rate that suggests at least some were written with hyperspeed AI. How To AI swims against the tide of fast, disposable books. Jerry Lawson recommends this book as a keeper.
- I Tested Claude for Word on Some Classic Litigator Tasks – Over the past several days Rebecca Fordon has been digging into the Claude for Word add-in, and the headline finding surprised her. On document-intensive legal work — cite-checking, consistency review, Table of Authorities assembly — it seems to need less supervision than either Claude on the web or Claude Code. Four tests bear that out, with limits worth knowing.
- Hallucinations” by West & Lexis AI? – Michael Berman addresses benchmarks used for AI legal research platforms in the context of the risk of hallucinations in retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) AI outputs. As Berman states, verification, of course, is not only good advice, but also an ethical mandate.
- Claude Legal Is Here, and It’s Worth a Closer Look – With the recently launched Claude Legal plugin, Nicole L. Black recommends to lawyers and legal professionals Claude’s AI for tasks like document review and contract drafting. The Claude Legal plugin runs within Claude Cowork, a desktop app that you can download, and no specialized legal software subscription is required.
- One‑way attack drones: Low‑cost, high‑tech weapons ‘democratize’ precision warfare – Prof. Michael C. Horowitz and Senior Research Analyst Lauren Kahn discuss how drones have rapidly changed military strategy, tactics, and pinpoint destructive force.
- Seeing Is Believing: Visualizing Legal Research – This article by Hannah Rosborough, winner of the 2026 Schulich School of Law Teaching Excellence Award, provides an overview of some visual aids for teaching legal research that she has developed over the past few years. Rosborough shares these based on positive student feedback and with the hope that others might find them useful in their own teaching or training.
- AI in Finance and Banking, April 30, 2026 – Semi-monthly column by Sabrina I. Pacifici. Five highlights from this post: Job Cuts Driven By AI Are Rising On Wall Street; The $19.8 Billion Signal: What JPMorgan’s Tech Budget Tells Every Banking CEO; Understanding Firms’ AI Efforts and Their Economic Impact; 51% of U.S. Consumers Expect AI to Replace Financial Advisors; and Bloomberg, the OG of financial data firms, has a potent new AI agent.
- AI in Finance and Banking, April 15, 2026 – Semi-monthly column by Sabrina I. Pacifici. Six highlights from this post: Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley see their stocks soar as the AI boom fuels big bank; Forecasting the Economic Effects of AI; The new, AI-powered Google Finance is expanding to more than 100 countries; Wall Street Banks Cut 5,000 Jobs Even as They Notched Record Profits; Financial institutions are no longer just managing risk and capital: They are building algorithms, deploying machine learning models; and UNC Charlotte unveils M.S. in Financial Engineering and Fintech to meet rising demand for AI-driven finance talent.
- Pete Weiss Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, April 25, 2026 – Five highlights from this week: We Don’t Really Know How A.I. Works. That’s a Problem; Online Betting Is Fueling a Wave of Bankruptcies Among Young Americans; Anthropic’s Mythos Model Is Being Accessed by Unauthorized Users; Google unleashes even more AI security agents to fight crime; and Sam Altman’s Creepy Eyeball-Scanning Company Gets in Bed With Zoom and Tinder.
- Pete Weiss Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, April 18, 2026 – Five highlights from this week: How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors; They See Your Photos; Agencies fall short on documenting AI acquisition best practices, GAO says; US Government Fails to Unmask Reddit User: Privacy Legal Battle; and A new cybercrime platform called ATHR can harvest credentials via fully automated voice phishing attacks that use both human operators and AI agents for the social engineering phase.
- Pete Weiss Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, April 11, 2026 – Five highlights from this week: As the Federal Government Rushes Toward AI, Here Are Three Cautionary Tales; Combating cybercrime and fraud: A unified approach; Signal messages on an iPhone have been harvested despite app security; Anthropic Says Its Latest AI Model Is Too Powerful to Be Released; and Cybersecurity Alert: Criminals Are Now Using Emojis to Avoid Detection.
- Pete Weiss Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, April 4, 2026 – Five highlights from this week: This Company Is Secretly Turning Your Zoom Meetings into AI Podcasts; Beware Dr. Chatbot: Privacy laws don’t protect health care data from AI; This new scam could trick you into downloading malware; Wireless Router Ratings & Reviews; and Report: Voice-Based Phishing Surges to New Heights.
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