
The new cohort of legal tech startups in this year’s LawTech Hub incubator, run by Australia’s Lander & Rogers, has been announced. And there’s some very interesting companies involved.
Lawme struck this site in particular with its mention of developing an ‘AI workforce’. And special hat tip to Mobius for the use of the term ‘automated production line’.
The five cohort members are:
‘Amender catches every drafting comment in lawyers’ emails and mark-ups. It then organises these into dynamic issue threads, where lawyers can carry on negotiating with the other parties or generate an issue list in Word.
An affordable and powerful tool utilising AI to speed up legal research, Courtaid allows lawyers to chat to up-to-date legal legislation and judgements and the data on the platform is updated daily.
Helping law firms automate legal due diligence of government registers, DDLoop allows them to deliver faster, more reliable results for clients on M&A, financing, and investment deals.
Lawme is an AI workforce factory helping unburden teams from up to 70% of routine and administrative tasks and paperwork. It’s a no-code solution that allows lawyers to build AI employees with toolkits such as templating engines, legal research, and integrations.
Mobius enables legal teams to amplify their impact by transforming complex, bespoke processes into an AI-automated production line using AI workflows and agents – all while maintaining complete control over proprietary knowledge and data.’
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As noted, Lawme ‘is an AI workforce factory’…..and they had me at AI workforce…!
They help ‘unburden teams from up to 70% of routine and administrative tasks and paperwork….. and that allows lawyers to build AI employees with toolkits such as templating engines, legal research, and integrations’.
Jordan Parker, founder of Lawme, said: ‘The LawTech Hub offers a unique opportunity to refine and scale Lawme in an environment that truly understands the challenges of modern legal practice. The LawTech Hub’s established network of legal experts and innovators is the perfect setting to validate our product with real-world feedback, ensuring that our solution meets the rigorous standards demanded in the Australian legal landscape.
‘By participating, we gain access to strategic guidance, industry insights, and potential pilot customers – all of which are critical as we move from closed pilot to broader adoption. The collaborative environment will help us fine-tune Lawme’s integration with widely used legal tools and workflows, ensuring that our AI ‘legal team’ continues to deliver practical, tangible efficiency gains for law firms.’
Daniel Proietto, chief executive partner at Lander & Rogers, concluded: ‘We’re very pleased to launch the eighth edition of Australia’s longest-running legal tech accelerator program, the LawTech Hub. The LawTech Hub enables us to work with the cohort to refine the new technologies being developed for the legal industry in order to deliver the best legal services to our clients.’
You can find more about the programme here.
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Legal Innovators California Conference, San Francisco, June 11 + 12
If you’re interested in the cutting edge of legal AI and innovation – and where we are all heading – then come along to Legal Innovators California, in San Francisco, June 11 and 12, where speakers from the leading law firms, inhouse teams, and tech companies will be sharing their insights and experiences as to what is really happening and where we are all heading.
We already have an incredible roster of companies to hear from. This includes: Legora, Harvey, StructureFlow, Ivo, Flatiron Law Group, PointOne, Centari, eBrevia, Legatics, Knowable, Draftwise, newcode.AI, Riskaway, SimpleClosure and more.
And if you are a startup and would like to get involved, then please contact:
robins@cosmonauts.biz

See you all there!
More information and tickets here.