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New York City Bar Association Podcast

New York City Bar Association
New York City Bar Association Podcast
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170 episódios

  • New York City Bar Association Podcast

    The Law School of Tomorrow: AI and the Future of Lawyer Training

    02/07/2026 | 47min
    Katherine Hughes hosts the latest podcast from the City Bar’s Presidential Task Force on Artificial Intelligence and Digital Technologies. She is joined by WashU Law Dean Stefanie Lindquist and AI Collaborative Co-Director Oliver Roberts to discuss how generative AI is reshaping law school teaching, assessment, and professional preparation.

    Dean Lindquist describes her wake-up call about student AI use, making AI a central dean priority, forming an AI task force, partnering with Roberts, and hiring an LLM engineer to support experimentation and tool-building. Roberts traces early experiences with hallucinated citations and argues AI education must go beyond AI regulation to hands-on tool use across legal workflows, core terminology, tool selection, and explicit ethics (competence, confidentiality, supervision, and overreliance).

    They discuss institutional guardrails such as eliminating take-home exams, using simulations, workflow-based pedagogy, and new assessment ideas like oral exams and quizzing students on submitted work. They also note scholarship and journal pressures and conclude that lawyers who can’t use AI will be replaced by those who can.

    02:13 Why AI Became Institutional
    03:50 Oliver’s AI Origin Story
    05:34 Faculty Misconceptions
    07:26 JD Learning Outcomes
    09:58 Core AI Competencies
    13:04 Schoolwide Guardrails
    16:56 Teaching Ethics through Scenarios
    21:19 Hidden Ethics Pitfalls
    23:56 Rethinking Assessment
    27:10 Drafting and Disclosure
    32:05 Workflows In Practice
    35:41 Handling Faculty Skepticism
    38:08 AI In Clinics
    40:10 Scholarship And Journals
    43:05 Closing Advice
  • New York City Bar Association Podcast

    Noise in Nature and Law

    18/06/2026 | 52min
    Environmental lawyer and Animal Law Committee member Robin Happel hosts a discussion on noise pollution and noise law with Jamie Banks of Quiet Communities and ocean noise researcher Vanessa ZoBell. Jamie explains how chronic leaf-blower and land-care noise led her to found Quiet Communities. She describes gaps in federal, state, and local noise regulation, focusing on the 1972 Noise Control Act, the rise and 1982 defunding of EPA’s Office of Noise Abatement and Control, and Quiet Communities’ lawsuit to reactivate the program. Vanessa outlines major ocean noise sources (commercial shipping and seismic air-gun surveys) and impacts on marine life, including stress, masking, behavioral changes, and examples such as post-9/11 stress hormone reductions in right whales and sonar-linked beaked whale strandings. They discuss challenges of relying on A-weighted averages, low-frequency noise, communication barriers, voluntary and incentive-based programs, electrification of equipment, vessel speed reduction benefits, and long-term California soundscape findings tied to economic events and marine heatwaves, plus vulnerable human populations and environmental justice concerns.

    00:42 Jamie on Quiet Communities
    04:17 Vanessa on Ocean Acoustics
    06:19 Major Ocean Noise Sources
    08:34 Noise Control Act History
    13:30 How Noise Harms Marine Life
    18:23 Ecological Impacts on Land
    20:34 Rethinking Noise Metrics
    27:14 Shipping Slowdown Success
    33:48 Incentives and Federal Tools
    40:31 Decadal Soundscape Study
    46:29 Vulnerable Groups and Justice
  • New York City Bar Association Podcast

    The Server Test and Substantial Similarity: Assessing the Second and Ninth Circuit’s Divergent Approaches to Copyright Law

    04/06/2026 | 47min
    In this episode, a panel of legal experts discusses the different approaches taken by the Second and Ninth Circuits on two key areas of copyright law: substantial similarity and the Server Test.

    Presented by the New York City Bar Association’s Copyright & Literary Property and Entertainment Law Committees, the panel explores recent and emerging case law and the Second and Ninth Circuits’ divergent approaches to analyzing substantial similarity, a key element of copyright infringement, as well as the ongoing debate surrounding the Server Test, which addresses whether the posting of online content constitutes a “display” within the meaning of the Copyright Act.

    Moderated by Dwayne Amos, Associate at Kasowitz LLP, the episode features a panel of leading copyright litigators and experts, including:

    • Barry Werbin, Counsel, Herrick Feinstein LLP
    • Aaron Moss, Partner, Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp LLP and author of the Copyright Lately blog
    • Marc Lebowitz, Principal, Lebowitz Law Office
    • James Bartolomei, Of Counsel, Duncan Firm

    The wide-ranging discussion covers the practical implications of these divergent approaches for copyright owners, litigators, content creators, online platforms, forum selection, free speech, and the application of copyright law nationwide.

    This episode was produced by Jose Landivar, Senior Associate at Coates IP LLP, with contributions from Philippa Loengard, Executive Director, Kernochan Center for Law, Media and the Arts and Lecturer in Law at Columbia Law School, and support from the New York City Bar Association Communications Team.

    Copyright Lately: Creative Law for Curious People – www.copyrightlately.com
  • New York City Bar Association Podcast

    The Genius Act and Payment Stablecoins: A Regulatory Deep Dive

    23/04/2026 | 32min
    Tiffany Smith (WilmerHale) speaks with Beth Haddock (Warburton Advisers) and Boaz Goldwater (Davis Polk) about Treasury’s notice of proposed rulemaking implementing the Genius Act’s framework for regulating payment stablecoins, focusing on guidance for state regimes to qualify as “substantially similar” to the federal approach.

    This podcast episode from the City Bar’s Presidential Task Force on AI and Digital Technologies compares the dual federal/state structure to banking and securities regulation, and describes “uniform” requirements versus areas with limited state calibration (e.g., capital, liquidity, supervisory procedures). We discuss the inter-agency stablecoin certification review committee’s discretion, challenges from evolving OCC standards, and the ten billion outstanding issuance threshold that triggers transition to OCC supervision while retaining state oversight, with possible waivers for certain pre-existing state regimes. We highlight key ambiguities for issuers, including moving federal benchmarks, supervisory capacity, and unresolved capital/liquidity measurement issues.

    01:38 Genius Act Rulemaking Overview
    03:08 Dual Federal State Framework
    04:17 Why a State Pathway
    09:31 State Discretion in Practice
    11:31 Managing Moving Goalposts
    13:34 Certification Review Committee
    15:56 Reserve Capital Liquidity Rules
    19:05 Crossing the 10 Billion Threshold
    23:42 Supervision and Enforcement Capacity
    25:33 Choosing State vs Federal Oversight
    28:20 Open Questions and Comment Priorities
  • New York City Bar Association Podcast

    Richard Tuske's 50 Years in the City Bar Law Library

    17/04/2026 | 1h 2min
    In this episode, beloved City Bar figure Richard Tuske reflects on his remarkable 50-year journey with the City Bar Law Library, from starting as a page in 1972 to serving today as Senior Director of Library Operations on the eve of retirement.

    Along the way, he shares vivid stories with Legal History Committee Chair Abigail Nitka on the library’s transformation into one of the most prominent legal libraries in the world—from towering stacks to the dawn of digital research and early Westlaw and Lexis—along with behind-the-scenes anecdotes on the history of City Bar membership, unusual research requests, the auction of a remarkable rare-books collection, a failed merger attempt, and the library’s technological evolution.

    00:00 Podcast Welcome 

    01:03 Early Page Years 

    07:30 From Stacks To Screens 

    14:53 Computer Revolution Begins 

    19:05 Unusual Research Request 

    25:24 Famous City Bar Members Spotlight 

    30:18 Salt Mines Preservation 

    33:36 What Remains Today 

    36:59 Computers Transform Research 

    41:08 Library Merger Attempt 

    43:52 Rare Books Collection & Auction 

    51:30 Future Library After Retirement 

    58:29 Legacy and Farewell
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