
Legal and compliance-focused AI company Norm Ai has expanded its partnership with asset manager Blackstone.
This expansion is happening as Norm is launching Norm Law, a tool that offers artificial intelligence (AI)-native legal services, focused initially on financial services clients, the company said in its announcement Thursday (Nov. 20).
For its part, Blackstone has invested an additional $50 million in Norm, via Blackstone Innovations Investments and funds affiliated with Blackstone Growth.
“To truly transform the delivery of legal services, lawyers and AI need to be fully integrated from the ground-up and from day-one,” John Nay, Norm’s founder and CEO, said in a news release.
“Norm Law is uniquely positioned at the intersection of AI and trusted expert attorneys. We believe this technology platform and people approach will revolutionize premium legal services, delivering more efficient and effective outcomes for the world’s most sophisticated institutions.”
According to the release, Blackstone, as well as global banks, hedge funds, insurance companies, and other asset managers, uses Norm Ai’s Legal & Compliance platform to streamline critical legal and compliance workflows.
The company’s platform carries out compliance checks into business activities, covering AI-generated content, agreements, and internal and external corporate communications.
Expanding on in-house deployments of Norm Ai for regulated content review, Blackstone and Norm Ai are now also teaming “to shape and develop Norm Law legal services for Blackstone’s use,” the news release added.
The expanded partnership with Blackstone comes eight months after Norm Ai announced it had raised $48 million in new funding.
It’s also happening at a moment when AI is making its deepest inroads to date into the legal world, as PYMNYS wrote last month.
“It is turning pilot-scale experimentation into production-level automation,” that report said. “From research and contracting to compliance and billing, AI systems are becoming embedded infrastructure in law firms and in-house operations. Investors are taking notice.”
Funding to legal technology startups had — as of that writing — exceeded $2.4 billion for the year, the highest yearly total recorded, according to Crunchbase. The surge reflects confidence that automation can relieve the sector’s document-heavy workloads. It can also unlock new operating leverage for firms.
However, PYMNTS wrote, regulators “are also tightening scrutiny. Courts are increasingly asking whether AI systems used in filings or research rely on verifiable, licensed datasets.”
In a JD Supra commentary, legal-tech advisors cautioned that vendors often overpromise time savings while underplaying governance overhead. The result, analysts argued, is a shift from “faster output” to verifiable accountability as the industry’s core competitive axis.
Source: https://www.pymnts.com/
