|
전 오픈AI 연구 부사장 제리 트워렉 인터뷰 2
... 파트너로서 Legora, Bridge, Physical Intelligence 등의...
|
gall.dcinside.com |
Xayin |
May 26, 2026 |
|
RE:zeynep inanoglu özdemir
(bkz: legora)ya cmo olarak katilmistir. hayirli olsun. basarilarini helal olsun be kadina diyerek takip ediyoruz.
|
eksisozluk.com |
justinyanus |
May 21, 2026 |
|
RE:the AI doomsday thread: bob sloplaw
jude law for "a lot of people are going to prison" https://legora.com/ Only registered members can see post attachments!
|
forums.somethingawful.com |
Cat Face Joe |
May 8, 2026 |
|
Education Department - School Board Rela
... as music streamer Spotify and Legora, an AI platform for the...
|
forums.delphiforums.com |
WALTER784 |
May 4, 2026 |
|
05.02.2026 Tech News
...고 있습니다. Legora (법률 AI 스타... AI 스타트업 Legora가 56억 달러...
|
gall.dcinside.com |
벌매 |
May 2, 2026 |
|
05.02.2026 Tech News
...고 있습니다. Legora (법률 AI 스타... AI 스타트업 Legora가 56억 달러...
|
gall.dcinside.com |
벌매 |
May 2, 2026 |
|
RE:Arbetsmarknaden för jurister 2026
... som nyexad. Du konkurrerar med Legora och andra AI-tjänster som i...
|
www.flashback.org |
def321 |
May 1, 2026 |
|
RE:Back to books - Sweden's schools cutting back on digital learning
... include music streamer Spotify and Legora, an AI platform for the...
|
www.lipstickalley.com |
Freja |
Apr 16, 2026 |
|
RE:How Legora scaled legal software to $100M ARR fast?
Legora says it went from about .... TNW | Insights – 1 Apr 26 Legora just hit $100 million in... months. Swedish legal AI startup Legora says it has crossed $100...
|
forum.kirupa.com |
ArthurDent |
Apr 2, 2026 |
|
RE:The drop is because of the Leg..
The drop is because of the Legora valuation news. It highlights another competition for TRI.
|
finance.yahoo.com |
Mike W |
Mar 10, 2026 |
|
RE:The drop is because of the Leg..
The drop is because of the Legora valuation news. It highlights another competition for TRI.
|
finance.yahoo.com |
Mike W |
Mar 10, 2026 |
|
RE:Le secteur juridique en danger
Reuter La startup Legora, spécialisée dans l'IA juridique, lève ...+1 La startup d'IA juridique Legora, basée en Suède, a déclaré... déclaré le directeur général de Legora, Max Junestrand, dans un communiqué...
|
www.boursorama.com |
Dorain |
Mar 10, 2026 |
|
(오픈AI) GPT-5.4 소개
... · Harvey / Thomson Reuters / Notion / HockeyStack / Legora / Clio “GPT-5.4는 문...
|
gall.dcinside.com |
초존도초 |
Mar 6, 2026 |
|
Legora rebranded (again)
The company formerly known as Leya has rolled out a new logo and color palette that feel more enterprise than startup. My take: This feels like a deliberate move away from an aesthetic that has become synonymous with its chief rival (starts with "H"). I'm not sure the new look makes Legora any more distinctive. What do we think? submitted by /u/meliarussell to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
meliarussell |
Mar 23, 2026 |
|
Does Legora or Harvey offer free pilots? Curious to try for a boutique firm I'm interning at.
Thanks for the insights. submitted by /u/Significant_Bee5400 to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Significant_Bee5400 |
Mar 19, 2026 |
|
Law firms: How much do you pay for Legora/Harvey/similar ?
And how, like per user? Or usage? Or what? I'm hearing they are giving out like free trials for 1 year - can anyone confirm? Like in tendering situations, to win the initial client at any cost. To us they both gave a ridiculously priced offer, but I guess we are too small for them. Edit: So many in-house legals here also asking - there's better tools for that, right? Because you need more context from your own company and contracts? Like the contract AI Bind for example? Tell us what you are using. submitted by /u/Front_Tea_316 to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Front_Tea_316 |
Mar 19, 2026 |
|
Has Anyone Worked For Harvey/Legora?
Hi, has anyone here left biglaw for Harvey or Legora? Any insights on the Legora work culture and would it still be close to biglaw hours? They’re hiring for a lot of legal engineers right now and I’m wondering if the move is worth it (sincerely, a 2nd year burned out of big law). submitted by /u/HoneydewOk2686 to r/biglaw [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
HoneydewOk2686 |
Mar 17, 2026 |
|
Legora raises $550M at $5.55B valuation — tripled from $1.8B in just 5 months. The legal AI war is heating up.
submitted by /u/andrew-ooo to r/aiagents [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
andrew-ooo |
Mar 16, 2026 |
|
Legora - Prompts / Workflows / Playbooks | Real Estate
Has anyone found either of these features to add meaningful value for commercial real estate transactions? Also, has anyone got any tried & tested prompts for routine work such as lease reviews, title reviews, COT analysis. Thanks in advance. submitted by /u/alexkarpsADHD to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
alexkarpsADHD |
Mar 14, 2026 |
|
Legal AI startup Legora secures $550 million in funding
Legora, an AI platform for lawyers, has raised $550 million in Series D funding, increasing its valuation to $5.55 billion. The company aims to expand its U.S. operations, having already grown its workforce significantly. By the end of 2026, Legora plans to open new offices and increase hiring nationwide. Read more: https://www.linkedin.com/news/story/legal-ai-startup-legora-secures-550-million-in-funding-8528418/ (LOCATION: not applicable.) submitted by /u/LinkedInNews to r/legal [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
LinkedInNews |
Mar 13, 2026 |
|
Harvey, Legora - A discussion
Hi all, I'm a corp. lawyer who has used both platforms and would like to rant and hear your thoughts. Firstly, Winston at Harvey is a liar! He claims he shared a random email with Sam Altman and got them to pre seed his venture and he was a random lawyer. He most likely had connections, otherwise Sam Altman ain't responding. I don't know why so many Silicon Valley types feel they need to create this aprocrphyl myth about their founding. Secondly, my thesis is: the original intention for open AI was to remain a non-profit and use Harvey etc. to monetise their tools. That was why they made the early investment. Once they changed their model and focused on profit tools, plus with the realisation that they weren't as far ahead as they thought they were (gemini, claude), they pivoted to sell to professional services. Now with Anthropic selling to law firms, Harvey / Legora has no MOAT. They can hire as many lawyers as they want to train their models and create workflows. Any law firm worth its salt would just deal with Anthropic directly, onboard their own lawyers to build bespoke models tailored to the exact precedents / workflows at that law firm, and have their own GPT / models. No entrenchment with these AI firms. No thousands of dollars per user charges. These valuations have to been the most wasteful thing ever. submitted by /u/Review_Particular to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Review_Particular |
Mar 10, 2026 |
|
Lawyers in India, both in-house and firms, how has your experience been with tools like Harvey, Legora and Lucio?
I work in-house in a team of about 50, we’re trying to zero in on a tool. Harvey lacks some important integrations. Curious if any other tools have integrations with govt websites like MCA that would make our lives easier? submitted by /u/solitarypizzaslice to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
solitarypizzaslice |
Mar 3, 2026 |
|
Harvey & Legora User Minimums?
I've seen other posts that mention pricing but curious if anyone is aware of user minimums? I'm curious about these tools because they've raised so much money and we're looking to start leveraging AI at our firm. I hate sales presentations though and there's very little information online. Does anyone know if they have user minimums (e.g. 20 seats) or any insight into the sales process? submitted by /u/legalavenger to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
legalavenger |
Mar 2, 2026 |
|
Legora 2nd interview
Hello everyone, I have a 2nd round interview scheduled for next week for a Legal Engineer role at Legora (Europe). Has anyone gone through the process and could give me some insights ? Would really appreciate it ! submitted by /u/RayfromFRA to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
RayfromFRA |
Feb 25, 2026 |
|
Interviewing for an AE role at Legora and Harvey. What are the real product differences between Harvey v Legora v Thomson Reuters’ CoCounsel?
Interviewing for an AE role for at all 3 companies. Honestly, I feel like all 3 products are so similar. Harvey and Legora are almost identical. Perhaps Harvey is slightly different because they have relationship with LexisNexis and can integrate data in the platform, and same with CoCounsel integrating Westlaw data. Where is the MOAT and workflow differentiator for any of these 3 companies? Anthropic might also just build Tabular Review ‘lite’ features into CoWork, cannibalising the differentiators of Legora and Harvey. Any insights from legal engineers from any of these companies would be greatly appreciated. submitted by /u/Loveblink182- to r/techsales [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Loveblink182- |
Feb 21, 2026 |
|
What are the real product differences between Harvey v Legora v Thomson Reuters’ CoCounsel?
Interviewing for an AE role for at all 3 companies. Honestly, I feel like all 3 companies’ products are so similar. Harvey and Legora are almost identical. Perhaps Harvey is slightly different because they have relationship with LexisNexis and can integrate data in the platform, and same with CoCounsel integrating Westlaw data. Where is the data MOAT and workflow differentiator for any of these 3 companies? Anthropic might also just build Tabular Review ‘lite’ features into CoWork, cannibalising the differentiators of Legora and Harvey. Any insights from legal engineers from any of these companies would be greatly appreciated. submitted by /u/Loveblink182- to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Loveblink182- |
Feb 21, 2026 |
|
Pricing: Harvey v. Claude v. Legora v. CoCounsel (from what we were quoted)
Posting this b/c pricing/value across the “main” tools we keeping hearing about is widely unclear. Context: I’m at a large sub-AmLaw firm and on the innovation committee. It’s lawyers + IT, no externally hired “innovation lead.” Respectfully: if you’re truly innovative, you don’t outsource that. We haven’t picked one platform firmwide yet (we’re close). We took pitches, proposals, and ran pilots/internal tests. No one’s paid me for this, other than the grief I get paid from LinkedIn and the bs articles. 1) Harvey ($1,200/seat/mo → $2,400 w/ Lexis → ~$399 lower tier) Harvey initially quoted us $1,200 per user per month, and $2,400 per user per month if we wanted Lexis integration. Later, they came back with a lower tier around $399/user/month. Wasn’t clear what got removed, but it looked like reduced scope, fewer services, maybe certain integrations (no iManage I think). Also, at four figures a seat, I expect the demo folks to be able to answer basic questions with depth. Wasn’t consistently the case. 2) Claude Cowork ($20 is fine, but the real tier is $200, and it’s still not a legal tool) I’ve spent time with Cowork since release and I’ve used Claude Code for “vibe coding”. Cowork is impressive general AI. But calling it a “legal tool” is a stretch. In practice, the lower tiers were basically throttled into uselessness for anything resembling a real workflow. I hit limits. The $200/month tier is where it becomes usable. At that point: why am I paying $200/month for something that still isn’t matter-centric, doesn’t have real legal workflows? This doesn’t work on an org level, but I can see how for a solo lawyer this may be good enough. Also, from what I can tell, the “legal skills” are basically system prompts + tool calling. That’s not legal reasoning. 3) Legora (pricing wasn’t fully clear to me personally - friend said $400 per month per user; support + lower-tier experience wasn’t great) I tested it but didn’t personally receive full pricing. I threw in a handful of precedent agreements for a vendor-heavy client and saw answer quality degrade once I pushed past a couple hundred pages of docs. A colleague had a lower-tier setup; his feedback was blunt: support was rough, and the whole thing felt optimized for big firms (fine), but the product doesn’t really “reverberate” down into the experience for everyone else. Also: “Leya” was a better name. 4) CoCounsel ($1,600/seat/mo in our stack) CoCounsel it self wasn’t pitched to us as a clean per-seat subscription b/c we’ve had trysts with Westlaw. It’s more of a bundled enterprise motion. In our setup (Westlaw + Practical Law + CoCounsel), it was effectively ~$1,600/month per seat. We talked about structures removing Practical Law, etcc., but at that spend level, the generations need to consistently save rewrite time. For us, they didn’t. 5) Where we are now (better bang-for-buck) We’re piloting a newer platform. Early view is that it’s better value (work product stronger, fair price point, good support). Still a pilot, so nothing final to declare. Generally, we care about a few things: answer quality, support, roadmap (b/c things change daily), and people actually using it. EDIT: By popular demand from the floods of DMs, when we pick a platform, will let yall know. Second EDIT: for those of you giving recommendations on sub $100 solutions or shilling your own. Think for yourself - the costs of the underlying models is too high to support this price point if your attorneys are using the tool on a daily basis; so these companies you talk about that don’t own their tech architecture, are the same as Legora or Harvey. What’ll happen once you run out of the aws or model credits? Again, we as a firm, and myself individually, have done deep dives on this. Will report back on the final outcome of the pilot stage. submitted by /u/tulumtimes2425 to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
tulumtimes2425 |
Feb 4, 2026 |
|
What AI program is your firm using?
Curious as to what AI options everyone's firms are using. submitted by /u/Hour-Picture-1556 to r/biglaw [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Hour-Picture-1556 |
Jan 9, 2026 |
|
Legora culture
Anyone who works at Legora who can speak to the culture and leadership? submitted by /u/Dandelion102323 to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Dandelion102323 |
Dec 16, 2025 |
|
I'm Max Junestrand, CEO of Legora. Ask Me Anything!
Hi Reddit! I'm Max, CEO and co-founder of Legora. Legora is a tool that helps lawyers achieve more using AI. Since inception in 2023, we've scaled the company to 200+ team members, 400+ clients in over 40 countries, and raised a total of $265M dollars - officially becoming a unicorn last week. I've just wrapped up a week in NYC, with our flagship event Precedent yesterday - and I'm currently hanging out at Newark waiting for a flight back to Europe. Announcement thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/legaltech/comments/1ons2ho/scheduled_ama_legora_ceo_max_junestrand_friday/ I'll be here for 90 minutes answering your questions. Fire away! submitted by /u/Legora_Max to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Legora_Max |
Nov 7, 2025 |
|
Scheduled AMA: Legora CEO, Max Junestrand | Friday, Nov 7th @ 2PM EST
Hi r/legaltech, I'm trying something new for our community - our first vendor AMA. Who: Max Junestrand, CEO of Legora When: Friday, November 7th, 11:00 AM PST / 2:00 PM EST / 7:00 PM GMT Duration: 90 minutes live How it works: Max will create a live thread on Friday at the scheduled time and answer questions in real-time. You can post questions here in advance (and upvote the ones you want answered most), or jump in live on Friday. A bit of context: Legora reached out after noticing that r/legaltech generates more mentions of them in their media monitoring than anywhere else globally (which says something about our community's reach and engagement!) They follow the sub and wanted to have a "real conversation" rather than a promotional exercise. This is experimental for us. We've never done vendor AMAs before, and honestly, this community is often - and rightly - AI-skeptical and vendor-skeptical. So share tough genuine questions below please. Max will be promoting this AMA and our community on his LinkedIn as well, so we continue to grow. Please upvote the questions you're most interested in - this will help Max to prioritize what to answer first. Looking forward to seeing what you all come up with. Let me know if you have any questions! Alex submitted by /u/alexdenne to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
alexdenne |
Nov 3, 2025 |
|
If you’re using AI, are you using general AI (GPT, Claude, Gemini) or specialized AI (Harvey, Legora, Spellbook)?
No schilling please. Do you find AI helpful? submitted by /u/Redrobin83 to r/Lawyertalk [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Redrobin83 |
Oct 16, 2025 |
|
Harvey v Legora
Has anyone here actually used both Harvey and Legora in a law firm setting? I keep seeing them described as “AI workspaces for lawyers,” but it is not clear what really separates them in day-to-day use. Would appreciate any first-hand insights on how they differ in workflow, integrations, or reliability submitted by /u/Left-Zucchini3993 to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Left-Zucchini3993 |
Oct 15, 2025 |
|
Has anyone used Harvey or Legora at their firms? If so, are they worth the price and actually help you cut down on time?
submitted by /u/Expensive-Acadia9076 to r/legaltech [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
Expensive-Acadia9076 |
Sep 9, 2025 |
|
Do these AI tools like Harvey and Legora make your life better or is it mostly toy of legal tech dept and COO?
Wondering this while scrolling here, reading about both transactional and Lit associates combing through piles of docs on ungodly hours. Do clients still want to pay for this on hourly basis or they just pay for the name on the office building as insurance policy (XYZ looked at it so in-house counsel is off the hook). See a lot of pushing for these tools last 3 months, probably burning VC money to get recurring revenue and 100x valuation asap submitted by /u/rookert42 to r/biglaw [link] [comments]
|
reddit.com |
rookert42 |
May 6, 2025 |