
Transforming.legal, the consulting group founded by Thomas Pfennig and which is behind the GOLT legal tech directory, has partnered with Europe’s ‘sovereign’ legal AI company Noxtua – which is backed by CMS and Dentons.
They said that with this partnership the AI company and the consulting group ‘aim to foster user confidence, interoperability, and sustainable digital transformation in an increasingly AI-driven legal landscape’.
Key aspects of the partnership include:
‘AI Enablement: Noxtua’s platform solution will be integrated into strategic transformation initiatives for legal and compliance clients.
Process Readiness & Advisory: Transforming.legal will support clients in strategic roadmap creation, process design, change management, and adoption of Noxtua.
Joint Thought Leadership: Both partners will co-create content, host events, and share insights on AI readiness, risk mitigation, and digital transformation in legal and compliance.
Unbiased Client Focus: The agreement is non-exclusive and revenue-neutral, ensuring full independence and client-centricity.’
As mentioned before by AL, in Germany very strict data rules have made life tricky for legal AI products – and in fact have contributed to generally low uptake of such tools until recently. Noxtua, as well as being home-grown, is focused on meeting all local data needs and hence can be adopted more easily both in Germany and in other parts of Europe.
As the partners said: ‘Legal and Compliance professionals can use legally compliant and competent Noxtua for key legal and compliance workflows such as researching legal issues or reviewing and drafting legal documents.’
Pfennig commented: ‘This partnership reflects our joint commitment to offer legal and compliance teams trusted AI solutions that deliver measurable value without compromising security or professional standards. Together, we unlock the full potential of AI in legal and compliance through responsible deployment and strategic enablement.’
Dr. Leif-Nissen Lundbæk, CEO & Co-Founder of Noxtua, concluded: ‘The AI race is heating up while security, compliance, and sovereignty become equally more important. In other words this is the perfect time to embrace secure, sovereign, and specialized legal AI.’
The company started as far back as 2017, as part of a research project by Lundbæk and Professor Dr. Michael Huth at Oxford University and Imperial College London.
Today, it now has offices in Paris and Berlin and is a fully-fledged legal tech business. Meanwhile Germany’s leading legal publisher C.H.Beck, plus tech business Northern Data, and law firms CMS and Dentons, have together invested a total of € 80.7m into Noxtua.
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You can find more about Transforming.legal here, and Noxtua here.
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