Its not meant to replace humans. Its meant to reduce the amount of tedious research work they need to do.
If you reduce the vast tedium of researching stuff in Westlaw/LexisNexis, you can spend more time on your research memo. You can do more actual analysis work. Thus firms can reduce the number of associates they need on staff, because the associates won't be wasting time on wrangling research results.
Yes, you still need a smart human to pose the right questions to Watson.
It probably won't even replace the vast tedium of researching West/Lexis for a while, but it might replace the "attorneys" that West/Lexis employ to summarize and tag articles w/ metadata. There is a ton of humanhours put into West/Lexis databases. They aren't just keyword searches.
Perhaps, if you are the 1% of lawyers who are associates at big law firms doing appellate-level research. They basically the same job as law students do in LRW class, pulling hundreds of quasi-relevant caselaw from a massive database. That side of things has, in recent years, been outsourced overseas.
Yes, but this is a system that gives you unlimited queries for even cheaper than if you were to outsource research. And since it is a cognitive computing system, it gets better over time.
If you reduce the vast tedium of researching stuff in Westlaw/LexisNexis, you can spend more time on your research memo. You can do more actual analysis work. Thus firms can reduce the number of associates they need on staff, because the associates won't be wasting time on wrangling research results.
Yes, you still need a smart human to pose the right questions to Watson.