Adv. Sharon Kohane, Head of our White-Collar Crime Department, participated in the Dun’s 100 White-Collar and Criminal Law Forum.
In her remarks, Adv. Kohane addressed the challenges posed by artificial intelligence to evidentiary law:
“In the white-collar arena, where digital evidence often lies at the heart of a case, AI brings both opportunities and unprecedented challenges. On the one hand, it enables rapid search, extraction and analysis; on the other, it forces us to confront a new question: not merely how to interpret the content of evidence, but whether the document itself is reliable – is it authentic evidence, or a sophisticated algorithmic creation? Courts, and we as lawyers, must address not only the presentation of evidence but also the conditions, mechanisms and technologies that generated it. This marks a true paradigm shift in evidentiary law, compelling us to develop new legal tools alongside a deeper technological understanding.”
For coverage: Calcalist