This roundtable will bring members together to openly discuss the real-world security challenges introduced by AI like Copilot. The purpose of this session is designed to share experiences, concerns, and practical lessons learned from teams already using the tool.
Participants will explore topics such as:
• Client Confidentiality, Privilege & Ethical Obligations • Client Imposed AI Restrictions & Contractual Risk
• Data Retention, Discovery & Auditability of Copilot Interactions
• Visibility Gaps & “Shadow AI” in Legal Environments
• Secure Development & Legal Specific Code Risks
• IP Ownership, Licensing & Downstream Liability
• Governance Models: Policy vs. Enforcement
• Incident Response & “AI Caused” Security Events
• Knowing what we know, What would we do differently
The discussion will also dive into how organizations are adapting their security practices, what policies are being put in place, and how code review processes are evolving.
Attendees are encouraged to share their own perspectives, ask questions, and collaborate on potential solutions. By the end of the session, our goal is for participants will walk away with a broader understanding of the threat landscape, as well as actionable ideas and peer-driven strategies for safely integrating AI assistants into modern development workflows.
Speakers:
John Hall, Managing Director of Security & Information Governance at Troutman Pepper Locke
Kenny Hall, Director of Cyber Security and Risk Management at Butler Snow LLP
Karl Mueller, Senior Director and CISO at Crowell & Moring
Jon Washburn, Chief Information Security Officer at Stoel Rives
Moderated by: Eric Anderson, Senior Director, IT and Security at Seyfarth Shaw LLP