
Lawyers Are Vibe Coding. Legal Tech Should Pay Attention.
January 29, 2026
Caleb HarrisLawyers building their own tools isn't a threat to enterprise software — it might be the best thing that could happen to it. Not because everyone's going to ship production apps, but because building changes how you think about your problems.
Building forces clarity
A lot of teams know they have a problem but can't articulate what the solution should look like. So they evaluate tool after tool, never quite satisfied, unable to pinpoint why.
Building changes this. You have to decide: What inputs matter? What does good output look like? How do you handle ambiguity? Suddenly you're not evaluating vendors with vague intuitions. You have a spec. You know what questions to ask.
Even if you end up buying, building first clarifies your requirements in a way demos never will. And it raises the bar for vendors too — when users can prototype in an afternoon, "good enough" doesn't cut it anymore.
The other 90%
Building a prototype is easy. Making it production-ready is a full-time job. This is some of the work enterprise software does for you:
- Evals. How do you know your outputs are accurate? Production AI needs systematic evaluation, not spot-checking.
- Model churn. GPT-5.2 behaves differently than Claude Opus 4.5 behaves differently than whatever dropped last week. Staying current means constant re-testing.
- Tooling changes. The ecosystem moves weekly. That script you wrote six months ago? Probably stale.
- Prompt decay. A prompt that worked in March might break in June. Prompt engineering isn't write-once; it's maintain-forever.
- Edge cases. Your prototype handles the happy path. An enterprise solution means accumulated learnings from thousands of users hitting edge cases you haven't yet.
- Reliability. What happens when OpenAI goes down? Fallbacks, retries, graceful degradation — someone has to build that.
- Security. Authentication, access controls, audit logs. Non-negotiable when client data is involved.
- Compliance. SOC 2, data residency, retention policies. The checkbox requirements that take months to get right.
When to build vs. buy
Build when it's exploratory, personal, or genuinely novel. Build when you need to discover what the solution should look like. Build when you're working with non-sensitive data and want to learn.
Buy when reliability matters, when others need to depend on it, when confidentiality is non-negotiable, and when the problem is well-understood enough that someone's spent years getting the details right.
Or do both. Prototype to learn what you need. Then find someone who's already built the production-grade version.
Resources for lawyers who want to build
Curious about vibe coding? Here's where to start:
Building with zero experience
- Replit: browser-based coding environment. No setup, no installs — the lowest barrier to entry if you've never built anything before.
- v0 by Vercel: generates UI/front-end components from a text prompt. If someone wants to build a simple internal dashboard or tool with a visual interface, this is even faster than Replit for that specific use case
- Bolt.new: similar to Replit but more focused on generating full apps from a single prompt. Another good "zero experience" starting point.
- Lovable: Full-stack app builder from natural language prompts. Describe what you want, get a working app with clean design out of the box.
Building with more control
- GitHub: Version control and collaboration. Essential if you want to track changes, share code, or build on others' work.
- Claude Code: Anthropic's coding agent. Excellent for document-heavy workflows and complex reasoning.
- Cursor: AI-powered code editor. More hands-on than Claude Code, better if you want to write and understand the code yourself.
Data resources
- USPTO Open Data: Free patent datasets and APIs. Essential raw material for any patent-focused project.
- CourtListener: Free legal database with court opinions, dockets, and oral arguments. Useful for litigation-related builds.
Community
- vibecode.law: Community and resources for lawyers learning to build with AI.
- case.dev: Legal-specific AI development platform.
- X (Twitter): The fastest place to hear about new tools, workflows, and what's actually working.
A note on vibe coding responsibly
Vendors like &AI have zero-data retention agreements with model providers. Your personal API key doesn't. Never expose confidential, personal, or privileged data when prototyping with any of these tools.
If you're a practicing lawyer or regulated professional, your existing obligations don't pause because you're building with AI. Vibe coding is a tool. You're still responsible for how you use it.
We built &AI because patent litigation is too high-stakes for "it mostly works." Nearly two years of evals, edge cases, and enterprise security so you can focus on the case, not the infrastructure. See what production-grade looks like — book a demo.
Frequently asked questions
Should lawyers build their own AI tools or buy legal software?
Build when the work is exploratory, personal, or genuinely novel, when you need to discover what the solution should look like, or when you're working with non-sensitive data and want to learn. Buy when reliability matters, when others need to depend on it, when confidentiality is non-negotiable, and when the problem is well-understood enough that someone has spent years getting the details right. You can also do both: prototype to learn what you need, then find someone who has already built the production-grade version.
What is vibe coding and what tools can lawyers use to start?
Vibe coding refers to building software with AI assistance, often without prior coding experience. For lawyers starting with zero experience, browser-based options include Replit, v0 by Vercel for UI and front-end components, Bolt.new for generating full apps from a single prompt, and Lovable for full-stack apps from natural language. For more control, options include GitHub for version control, Anthropic's Claude Code, and the Cursor AI-powered code editor.
Why does building a prototype make lawyers better software buyers?
Building forces clarity because you have to decide what inputs matter, what good output looks like, and how to handle ambiguity. Instead of evaluating vendors with vague intuitions, you end up with a spec and know what questions to ask. Even if you ultimately buy, building first clarifies your requirements in a way demos never will, and it raises the bar for vendors.
What does enterprise software handle that a lawyer's prototype does not?
Making a prototype production-ready involves significant work that enterprise software handles for you, including systematic evals to verify output accuracy, managing model churn and constant re-testing, adapting to weekly tooling changes, and addressing prompt decay. It also covers edge cases learned from thousands of users, reliability features like fallbacks and retries, security controls such as authentication and audit logs, and compliance requirements like SOC 2 and data residency.
How can patent lawyers vibe code responsibly without exposing confidential data?
Never expose confidential, personal, or privileged data when prototyping with these tools. Vendors like &AI have zero-data retention agreements with model providers, but a personal API key does not. Practicing lawyers and regulated professionals remain bound by their existing obligations, which do not pause because they are building with AI, so they are still responsible for how they use it.
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