The piece draws on frameworks developed by University of Texas researcher Julie Schell and applies a concept popularized by writer William Gibson. No specific companies, agencies, or legislation are cited, though the guidance critiques generic platform overreach and inflated vendor contracts as common pitfalls.
The timing reflects a maturing but volatile AI landscape. Ninety-nine percent of Fortune 500 companies now deploy AI, and weekly generative AI usage in large firms doubled from 2023 to 2024. Yet adoption remains uneven: while IT and marketing functions report 36 percent AI integration and data analytics reaches 62 percent, only 39 percent of IT leaders express confidence in their data readiness. As tool costs drop and capabilities accelerate, attorneys advising corporate clients should expect increased pressure to adopt AI—and increased liability exposure from poorly governed implementations. The framework offers a practical counterweight to hype-driven spending and a template for documenting measured, defensible AI governance decisions.