professional ethics

About this tag
Professional ethics in the context of AI adoption is a recurring theme across recent WindowsForum threads, particularly within the legal industry. Discussions cover how law firms like Faegre Drinker are rolling out Microsoft Copilot alongside expanded AI ethics training, emphasizing that governance must keep pace with productivity gains. Other threads explore Harvey's expansion into UK law schools, forcing faculties and regulators to confront professional-responsibility questions, and Latham & Watkins' mandatory AI Academy that treats tool mastery as a core legal skill. A broader analysis notes that widespread, governed AI deployments remain rare due to ethical and regulatory friction. These sources highlight the intersection of enterprise AI, Microsoft tools, and the evolving standards of professional ethics.
  1. Faegre Drinker Rolls Out Harvey and Microsoft Copilot Firmwide With AI Ethics Training

    Faegre Drinker said Thursday that it has given all lawyers, consulting professionals, and staff access to Harvey and Microsoft Copilot while expanding AI ethics training across the firm’s operations, including its major Indianapolis office. The move is not just another Big Law technology...
  2. Harvey Expands Law School Program to the UK: AI in Legal Education

    Harvey’s legal AI platform is being embedded into mainstream legal education in the United Kingdom, with Oxford University Faculty of Law, The University of Law, The Dickson Poon School of Law at King’s College London and BPP University Law School joining Harvey’s law‑school programme — a move...
  3. Latham AI Academy: Making AI Mastery a Core Legal Skill

    Latham & Watkins told its more than 400 first‑year associates in a mandatory two‑day “AI Academy” that artificial intelligence is not optional—it's now part of standard legal practice, and mastery of the tools will be a core expectation of modern lawyering. Background The training weekend in...
  4. Law Firms and AI: From Pilots to Safe, Governed Production

    Law firms are experimenting with artificial intelligence at a rapid clip, but according to recent reporting and industry surveys, widespread, fully governed production deployments remain the exception rather than the rule—a reality shaped less by technical immaturity than by ethical, regulatory...