Artificial intelligence is moving beyond standalone large language model wrappers toward collections of specialized AI agents that reason, act, and collaborate to achieve complex outcomes. This multi-agent vision, articulated in Google’s Introduction to Agents whitepaper,[1] marks a subtle, but seismic, shift in how businesses will deploy AI; and spotlights nuanced legal challenges that litigators and in-house counsel should start addressing now.
[1] https://www.kaggle.com/whitepaper-introduction-to-agents (last visited January 21, 2026).
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- The Case Was Settled, But ChatGPT Thought Otherwise: A Dispute Poised to Define AI Legal Liability
- “Claude Is Not an Attorney”: Individuals Risk Abandoning the Attorney-Client Privilege and Attorney Work-Product Doctrine When Consulting AI
- Prediction Markets v. State Gaming Laws: The Kalshi Litigation Gamble
- Sentencing Commission Seeks Public Input on Amendments to Fraud Sentencing Guidelines
- Agentic AI’s Next Iteration: From Super-AIs to Teams of Specialized Agents — and What It Means for Law & Business