Coming Soon — Profile No. 01 launching March 2026
Technocracy.legal — Profiles in Legal Innovation
New — Sign up to be notified when the first profile drops
Format — Long-form profiles, read aloud, available as podcast
Blog — Editorial commentary on legal tech, live now
Coming Soon — Profile No. 01 launching March 2026
Technocracy.legal — Profiles in Legal Innovation
New — Sign up to be notified when the first profile drops
Format — Long-form profiles, read aloud, available as podcast
Blog — Editorial commentary on legal tech, live now
Profiles in Legal Innovation

Meet the
minds
rewriting
the rules.

In-depth, journalist-crafted profiles of the thinkers, builders, and disruptors shaping the future of law. One story. One person. Every time.

~1,500 Words per profile
8 min Avg. read time
Audio Every profile narrated
T
Profiles in the pipeline
01
Legal AI
Profile One
Details to follow
Publishing March 2026
02
Coming Soon
Profile Two
Details to follow
Publishing April 2026
03
Coming Soon
Profile Three
Details to follow
Publishing May 2026
"The future isn't a destination or a single figure on a chart. It's a process. So, who's leading it? Who are its champions — who are its critics?"
— The Technocracy.legal Manifesto
About this publication

Journalism for the legal profession's next chapter

Technocracy.legal publishes original, long-form profiles of the people collectively shaping the future of law — its founders, its critics, its builders, and its reluctant converts.

Each profile is around 1,500 words, written by a journalist, and available to read and listen to as a narrated audio edition.

We are not a trade publication. We are not a news service. We are a magazine of ideas — and the people behind them.

01 —
Original Reporting

Every profile is a primary interview. No aggregation, no press releases, no AI-generated summaries of someone else's work.

02 —
Read & Listen

Every profile is available as a high-quality AI-narrated audio edition and downloadable podcast episode.

03 —
One Story at a Time

We publish one profile per month. Deliberately. The format demands depth, and depth demands space.

◆ From the Blog

Editorial

All Posts →
24 Feb 2026

The AI That Passed the Bar Has Already Been Forgotten. That's the Point.

When GPT-4 passed the bar exam in 2023, the legal press treated it as a watershed moment. Two years on, it looks more like a parlour trick. The real disruption is happening somewhere far less dramatic.

6 min read →
18 Feb 2026

In Defence of the Billable Hour. No, Really.

Every legal tech founder positions their product against the billable hour as if it were a moral failing rather than a business model. But the billable hour solved a real problem. What replaces it needs to solve an equally real one.

5 min read →
10 Feb 2026

Access to Justice Is a Phrase That Has Stopped Meaning Anything.

It appears in every legal tech pitch deck, every bar association report, every government consultation. It has become a kind of incantation — repeated so often it now functions as a placeholder for actual thinking.

7 min read →