Most law firms aren’t worried about losing privilege.
They’re worried about using AI incorrectly.
Those are not the same thing.
Because privilege doesn’t get challenged when everything goes right.
It gets challenged when opposing counsel asks a very specific question:
“Who had access to this information—and where did it go?”
And increasingly, the answer is not as clean as it used to be.
Attorney-client privilege has never been about intent.
It doesn’t matter if:
What matters is:
Whether confidentiality was actually preserved.
Historically, that was straightforward.
AI changes that.
Privilege risk isn’t created by using AI.
It’s created the moment confidential information leaves a controlled environment without clear boundaries.
That can happen when:
At that point, a new question is introduced:
Has confidentiality been maintained—or has it been waived?
And critically:
Can the firm prove the answer?
In a dispute, perception matters as much as reality.
Even if:
If the firm cannot clearly demonstrate:
Then privilege can be challenged.
Not because something definitively went wrong
But because the firm cannot prove that nothing did.
The risk is rarely obvious.
It shows up in small, everyday actions:
Attorneys using AI tools independently, without consistent oversight or approved workflows.
Unclear understanding of how third-party platforms process, retain, or isolate data.
Guidelines exist—but there is no technical control ensuring they are followed.
No clear record of:
Courts haven’t rewritten privilege doctrine for AI.
They don’t need to.
The existing standard still applies:
Was confidentiality maintained?
What’s changed is how difficult it is to answer that question with certainty.
Privilege is no longer just a legal issue handled in a courtroom.
It’s an operational issue handled in:
If those aren’t aligned, the firm may:
In a challenge scenario, the standard is no longer:
“We have a policy.”
It’s:
“We can demonstrate exactly how this data was handled, where it went, and why confidentiality was preserved.”
That requires:
AI is not inherently incompatible with attorney-client privilege.
But it introduces a new requirement:
Firms must be able to prove control—not just assume it.
Because in practice, privilege isn’t lost when something obviously goes wrong.
It’s lost when:
There’s just enough uncertainty that it can be challenged.
And right now, that uncertainty is growing faster than most firms realize.