LAST CHANCE to enroll – July 13 AI Contracts Webinar

Don’t miss out – register now for our July 13 webinar, w/Q&A, that focuses on artificial intelligence contracts. Join David Tollen to learn what software terms work (or don’t) in contracts involving AI. Can’t join us live? Recording access is available to registrants for a limited time.

Our trainings cover a wide variety of topics to build – and keep current – your tech contracting skills. There’s something for everyone within your organization involved in the contract negotiations process – attorneys and businesspeople. CA CLE available. And, see below (or registration pages) for discounts.

July 13 Webinar – AI Contracts: Drafting and Negotiating

Artificial intelligence is software – delivered via the cloud, like SaaS, or as an on-premise system. So most of its terms should be familiar to experienced tech contracts drafters. However, the most sophisticated forms – generative AI like ChatGPT – have features unlike any other software. We’ll look at those differences and the new terms they require. And we’ll look at commonalities with traditional software deals.

Topics covered include:

  • Rights to training data, prompts, and outputs
  • Special IP risks and their impact on indemnities, warranties, and more
  • Privacy compliance terms
  • Terms on hallucination, defamation, and other third party risks
  • AI’s role as SaaS … or not
  • And more …
Image of Webinar sign up button

Other Webinars; Tech Contracts Master Classes

Tech Contracts Academy offers more webinars. Plus, this fall we offer two Tech Contracts Master Class series. All taught by industry expert David Tollen. Unavailable when a program is offered live, or want to watch again? Access to recordings is available to registrants for a limited time after each live program. CA CLE available.

 

Please follow us on LinkedIn, and be among the first to know about our programs, including free LinkedIn Live conversations. 

Logo Description automatically generated

CLE. Tech Contracts Master Classes™ and Tech Contracts Academy’s webinars are approved for Continuing Legal Education credit in California. Licensed elsewhere? Jurisdictions (and professions) differ as to whether students may apply individually for continuing education credit, and what is required. Materials we make available for Tech Contracts Academy’s programs (e.g., slides, presenter’s biography) may assist students’ self-submission efforts. Check here for more details about CLE. 

Discounts: See program registration pages for information about group discounts (teams of five or more from same company, for same program: 10% off a full Master Class series; 15% off any webinar). And, NEW: For a limited time, a 10% discount is also available for individuals – after enrolling in one webinar at full price (starting with our July 2023 webinar), returning students may request a 10% discount code to use when enrolling in subsequent webinars through the end of 2023. Contact [email protected] for more information, and to obtain a discount code prior to enrolling. (Only one discount code per program may be used. Individual discount does not apply to Master Classes).

Our presenter. David Tollen founded Tech Contracts Academy® LLCAn attorney, instructor at U.C. Berkeley Law School, and expert witness, he authored the American Bar Association’s perennial bestseller, The Tech Contracts Handbook (ABA Publishing; 3rd ed. 2021). It is available from Amazon here, and other retailers.

Tech Contracts Academy® is a professional training company, created to bring confidence and expertise to professionals responsible for technology contracts. It provides public and in-house training on drafting and negotiating IT agreements. Contact us here or email [email protected] for more information about training for just your team.

Our programs provide general education, not legal advice. This communication is not, and our programs are not, advertising to provide legal services. Only one discount code may be used per registration.

www.techcontracts.com

Related Posts

The Overuse of Indemnities

This week’s musings on tech contracts… Many American IT contracts feature a strange clause. One party (usually the customer) asks the other for an indemnity

Read More »