Law 2.0: The Future of Legal Services Lies Not in Legal Provisions, but in Algorithms

27.6.2025 | Autor: Róbert Hronček
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Digital transformation is changing the world around us—and legal services are no exception. Companies no longer need lawyers who solve problems after the fact. They need a partner who anticipates, protects, and helps them grow.

Law 2.0: The Future of Legal Services Lies Not in Legal Provisions, but in Algorithms

Legal services are changing. Are you ready?

The traditional “crisis lawyer” model is giving way to legal advice that is accessible, predictable, and integrated into everyday decision-making. Law is no longer just a cost—it is a tool for efficiency, growth, and innovation.

Instead of hourly billing, the model of law as a service—embedded legal—is emerging. Prevention instead of intervention, team collaboration instead of isolated expertise, technology as an ally, not a threat.

No, AI won’t replace lawyers. But it will replace the routine work they do. The future belongs to those who understand both law and business, technology and people. To those who can connect the dots, think critically, and collaborate across disciplines.

The law needs an update. Not a cosmetic one, but a systemic one. The question is not whether change will come—but who will be ready when it does.


You can read the full article at Forbes.sk

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Róbert Hronček

Róbert Hronček

He graduated from the Faculty of Law at Matej Bel University in Banská Bystrica (2009), where he also successfully defended his master’s thesis on the topic “Trade Names and Their Legal Protection.” In 2011, he completed his postgraduate studies at the Faculty of Law of Matej Bel University in Banská Bystrica, defended his postgraduate thesis on the topic “Trademarks and License Agreements,” and passed the postgraduate examination in the field of commercial law. From September 2005 to June 2009, he completed his legal internship at the District Court in Banská Bystrica. From October 2005 to June 2006, he worked as a legal assistant at the law firm of JUDr. Jozef Zlocha. From September 2009 to March 2011, he worked as a trainee attorney at the law firm BÖHM & PARTNERS in Bratislava, and from March 2011 to April 2013 as a trainee attorney at the law firm of JUDr. Kvetoslava Kolínová in Žilina. He has been a lawyer since 2013. He focuses primarily on commercial law, particularly contract law, substantive civil law, labor law, and corporate law. One of his specializations is also unfair competition law and intellectual property law. He provides legal services in Slovak and English.