LLMs translate legal knowledge into something everyone can use.
LegalOS originally built a no-code visual diagramming tool that lets legal experts encode their knowledge in a structured, machine-readable way. It’s like a programming language for law. In recent months, we’ve pivoted to use LLMs much more heavily to make that legal knowledge accessible. LLMs provide a higher level of abstraction for automations. They let us map open-ended legal requests to structured tasks without requiring someone to manually encode every single rule. The LLM acts as an interface or translator, so humans don’t have to understand legalese directly but can still interact with legal text.
— Will LLMs scale and revolutionize the legal space? · The Edge