Sieminski's full remarks and any specific examples of AI applications at Liquid AI have not been detailed publicly. The extent to which other major legal departments have adopted similar frameworks remains unclear, though other CLOs including Claire Hart of Groq have made comparable statements about AI as foundational to modern legal practice.
Attorneys evaluating AI adoption should note the distinction Sieminski draws: AI handles volume and speed; humans retain decision-making authority. For in-house counsel and law firms, this framing offers a practical middle ground between wholesale automation and resistance. As generative AI reshapes contract review, legal research, and patent work, the question for legal leaders is no longer whether to integrate these tools but how to structure workflows that preserve human judgment while capturing efficiency gains. Sieminski's perspective provides a useful reference point for that conversation.