More
    Home Blog Page 2

    AI Legal Tool Harvey Targets VC and Startup Law Market

    0


    Peter Zhang
    Apr 08, 2026 15:32

    Harvey AI expands its legal automation platform to serve venture capital and emerging company lawyers, promising 10 hours saved per attorney weekly.





    Harvey AI is making a direct play for the venture capital legal market, rolling out specialized workflow tools designed to handle everything from SAFE note reviews to IPO preparation. The legal AI platform claims law firms using its system are saving up to 10 hours per attorney per week on financing deals.

    The company’s pitch centers on automating the repetitive grunt work that dominates startup law: incorporation checklists, term sheet comparisons, cap table reconciliation, and the endless document review that accompanies priced funding rounds.

    What Harvey Actually Does

    The platform targets five distinct stages of a startup’s legal lifecycle. For new company formation, Harvey generates jurisdiction-specific incorporation checklists and helps attorneys draft founder communications that don’t read like legal jargon. During early financing rounds, the system can review SAFEs and convertible notes, flagging key terms like valuation caps, discounts, and pro rata rights across multiple documents simultaneously.

    Where things get interesting is in priced rounds. Harvey compares proposed term sheets against both market standards and a firm’s own precedent database, theoretically catching deviations that junior associates might miss during late-night document reviews. The platform also handles due diligence by extracting change-of-control clauses and flagging cap table inconsistencies before they blow up a deal.

    The Efficiency Claim

    Cole-Frieman & Mallon, a law firm using Harvey for venture financing work, reports the 10-hour weekly savings figure. That’s a significant productivity boost if accurate, though independent verification of such claims remains difficult in the legal tech space.

    Harvey’s “Shared Spaces” feature attempts something more ambitious: creating a collaborative workspace where founders and their lawyers can work from centralized documents. Whether startup founders actually want another platform to manage during fundraising chaos is an open question.

    The Bigger Picture

    For crypto and Web3 startups navigating funding rounds, AI-assisted legal review could meaningfully reduce costs during capital-intensive periods. Legal fees remain a significant burn item for early-stage companies, and tools that compress review timelines might free up capital for actual building.

    The platform also handles exit preparation, including M&A approval requirements and cap table cleanup—processes that have historically generated substantial billable hours. Whether law firms embrace tools that could cannibalize their revenue model remains the central tension in legal AI adoption.

    Harvey hasn’t disclosed pricing or the number of firms currently using the ECVC-specific features.

    Image source: Shutterstock


    Source link

    Bitcoin Bulls Struggle With $72,000 Reclaim Despite US-Iran Ceasefire

    0

    Bitcoin bulls failed to stay above $72,000 for long as BTC price action already began to discount the impact of a US-Iran ceasefire agreement.

    Bitcoin (BTC) hit new three-week highs into Wednesday’s Wall Street open as stocks surged on a US-Iran ceasefire.

    Key points:

    • Bitcoin briefly hits new three-week highs before round-tripping its gains.

    • Iran ceasefire relief fails to last as traders demand that bulls reclaim higher levels.

    • More volatility is due thanks to US inflation reports.

    BTC price fails to stay above $72,000

    Data from TradingView captured BTC/USD reaching $72,865 on Bitstamp before cooling the day’s gains.

    BTC/USD one-hour chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView

    News of a minimum two-week ceasefire between the US, Israel and Iran sent risk assets higher in an instant, with the S&P 500 up by more than 2.5% at the open.

    WTI crude oil declined to as low as $91 per barrel as oil-supply crisis fears eased and traffic began to resume through the Strait of Hormuz. This came despite reports of an attack on a Saudi oil pipeline.

    CFDs on WTI crude oil one-hour chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView

    “The S&P 500 is now set to open above 6,800, trading just 2.9% away from a new record high. The index has added +$1.6 TRILLION today,” trading resource The Kobeissi Letter wrote in its latest market coverage on X.

    S&P 500 one-hour chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView

    Among Bitcoin market participants, the relief was also palpable.

    “I mentioned earlier that a ceasefire would be a clear direction on the markets. It happened,” crypto trader Michaël Van de Poppe wrote in an X response

    “Bitcoin breaks through the crucial $71K level and builds a bullish structure. Oil is down and the Strait is open, which means that there’s a mean reversion play active on Bitcoin.”

    BTC/USDT one-day chart. Source: Michaël Van de Poppe

    Van de Poppe described the need to hold support at $69,500 as “crucial.”

    “That would strengthen the entire theory of a higher lows, higher highs and continues the momentum upwards and is likely going to fall alongside a new all-time high on the Nasdaq,” he added.

    More inflation volatility on the horizon

    Trader Daan Crypto Trades meanwhile said that $72,000, a sticking point in recent weeks, needed to be cleared.

    Related: Bitcoin RSI ‘nearly perfectly’ copying end of 2022 bear market: Analysis

    “Another day another test of the $72K level. Let’s see if the bulls can push through this time around,” he told X followers. 

    “I want to see a clean break and hold above that area. Ideally for more than 1-2 days this time.”

    BTC/USDT perpetual contract eight-hour chart. Source: Daan Crypto Trades/X

    Earlier, Cointelegraph reported on other traders’ concerns about overall BTC price strength, which argued that Bitcoin bulls “still have a lot of work to do.”

    The remainder of the week will see key US inflation releases, these set to show the initial impact of the Iran conflict and spark characteristic risk-asset volatility.