Opus 2 Launches Winter Release With Uncover Integration

Litigation technology pioneer, Opus 2, has launched its Winter release, introducing the first steps of a ‘multi-phase integration’ with Uncover, which it bought last year.

Since acquiring the Dutch startup in October, the company said it has now incorporated Uncover AI technology into ‘Opus 2 Cases’, accelerating how dispute teams analyse case materials, develop strategy, and prepare for trial.

With this and other new aspects, Opus 2 can now provide:

  • Matter Assist: Ask questions and get answers that support matter-specific analysis, drafting, and structured insights from all data specific to a matter you’re working on.
  • Document Assist: Receive fast, precise Q&A and task-focused outputs from one or more documents, plus pulling key facts into chronological order.
  • General Assist: Access the latest enterprise version of an all-purpose, leading LLM for handling any non-matter research, drafting, or analysis securely without leaving Opus 2.
  • Prompt Library and Builder: Use our robust library or create and reuse powerful prompts for consistent, high-quality outputs.’

Greg Blackman, CEO of Opus 2, commented: ‘Law firms have made their expectations clear. They want to see accelerated AI innovation from the platforms they depend on. We’re committed to exceeding those expectations. I’m thrilled to share that we’re delivering award-winning AI capabilities from Uncover, just a few months after the start of our integration.’

While Tiama Hanson-Drury, Chief Product and Technology Officer, added: ‘Uncover brings speed and intelligence. Opus 2 brings structure and security. Together, they help lawyers move from insight to action, amplifying expertise for better firm and client outcomes.’

Is this a big deal? First, it shows exactly why Opus 2 bought Uncover, with some very distinct AI additions to the platform. Second, it also shows how far the litigation specialist is expanding its offering, which has broadened now far beyond general case management into some very text-specific AI skills such as drafting, for example, as well as the ability to build prompt libraries.

The move comes at a time of increasing activity among a growing range of players in the non-eDiscovery side of litigation technology, which has been very much driven by the way that genAI’s language understanding capabilities can be applied to much of the work above and beyond the discovery phase of a dispute.

More about Opus 2 and what it can do now here.


Discover more from Artificial Lawyer

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.