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Autodraft AI specializes in producing first drafts of commercial contracts, including NDAs, service agreements, and lease contracts with 92% accuracy when benchmarked against standard firm templates. The platform analyzes over 500,000 verified legal documents to ensure clauses comply with current regulations across all 50 U.S. states. For complex transactions like M&A deals, the system provides framework drafts that attorneys can refine, reducing initial drafting time by approximately 75%.

The system integrates daily updates from state and federal legal databases, automatically flagging clauses affected by recent legislative changes. When drafting, Autodraft AI provides citation footnotes explaining the legal basis for each clause and suggests alternative language for jurisdictions with specific requirements. However, attorneys should still verify critical sections against the most recent case law, as the AI's knowledge has a 48-hour update latency for court decisions.

Autodraft AI supports full collaborative editing with version control that tracks every change by user, time, and location. The platform highlights modifications that deviate significantly from standard firm positions and maintains an audit trail of all edits. Team leaders can set permission levels to control who can accept AI-suggested revisions or modify core clauses, ensuring proper oversight in sensitive matters.

The platform employs military-grade 256-bit encryption for all documents in transit and at rest, with optional client-managed encryption keys for additional security. Autodraft AI has achieved SOC 2 Type II certification and offers on-premise deployment options for firms handling particularly sensitive matters. All user activity is logged with blockchain-verified timestamps to meet evidentiary standards.

Autodraft AI offers tiered subscriptions based on: Number of users (solos to 500+ attorney firms) Document complexity levels (basic forms to complex transactions) Integration needs (API calls to existing practice management systems) Enterprise plans include dedicated training and custom template development, while smaller firms can access standardized packages through legal tech marketplaces.