Lawisense Blog
Legal Tech Insights for Indian Advocates
Articles on eCourts, practice management, and the future of Indian law.
How to find any case on eCourts in under 60 seconds
A step-by-step guide to searching the national eCourts portal by CNR, party name, or advocate — and how Lawisense makes it even faster.
22 June 2026New in Lawisense: High Court case search
You can now search and track High Court matters directly in Lawisense, alongside district court and Supreme Court cases. Here is what it does and how to use it.
25 June 2026Read articleGST and legal billing: what advocates and law firms need to get right
GST treatment of legal services confuses many practitioners — especially the reverse charge mechanism. Here is a plain-English orientation for getting your billing right.
16 June 2026Read articleThe Supreme Court's draft AI-in-courts rules: what the 2026 regulations mean for your practice
In June 2026 the Supreme Court's AI Committee released India's first draft regulations for using artificial intelligence in courts. Here is what advocates should take from them.
9 June 2026Read articleBring your own key: a safer way for Indian lawyers to use AI
AI can help with drafting and research — but feeding client secrets into the wrong tool is a real risk. Here is why a 'bring your own key' approach makes sense for legal work.
2 June 2026Read articleBuilding a (mostly) paperless law office in India: a practical roadmap
Going fully paperless in Indian litigation is a myth — court copies still matter. But a mostly-paperless office is achievable, and the gains are real. Here is how to get there.
28 May 2026Read articleSeven legal billing mistakes that cost Indian lawyers money
Most billing losses are self-inflicted and entirely preventable. Here are seven common mistakes Indian advocates make — and how to stop making them.
21 May 2026Read articleWhy Indian lawyers still use diaries for hearing dates (and what it costs them)
The paper diary survived computers, smartphones, and eCourts. Here is why it persists in Indian practice — and the hidden cost of manual hearing-date tracking.
19 May 2026Read articleLegal research in India: how the tools have changed, and how to use them well
From bound volumes to AI-assisted search, legal research in India has transformed. Here is how to combine the tools effectively — without losing the rigour.
14 May 2026Read articleWhat a client actually wants from their lawyer (it's not what you think)
The number one client complaint in Indian legal practice is not about losing the case or the fee. It is about being kept in the dark.
7 May 2026Read article