The most-talked-about legal drama last week wasn’t on a streamer, but on Reddit. Harvey, an AI-for-law startup valued at $5 billion, found itself on defense after a purported former employee claimed in a post that lawyers weren’t actually using its tools. Harvey pushed back with internal stats, as screenshots of the post jumped to LinkedIn and the debate spilled beyond the startup.
Legaltech has long promised to draft contracts, sift data, and give lawyers their nights and weekends back. The reality has lagged. Lawyers are cautious and demand accuracy.
Harvey bills itself as the platform lawyers can finally trust: chatbots that don’t invent fake cases and assistants that don’t feed client data back to Big Tech. The company is selling large law firms and corporate legal teams a future where they aren’t automated away, just augmented.
Whether firms are truly buying in is the question lurking beneath Harvey’s Reddit flare-up. The answer matters to its employees and investors who’ve poured $800 million into the company. It may mean just as much for the dozens of competitors that have sprung up in Harvey’s wake.
Harvey has become the case study that others point to as “proof of market.” Startups, such as Legora, Supio, and Eudia, have raised fresh rounds of funding as investors chase the next big thing in legal, having seen Harvey’s momentum. Incumbents are reorganizing. In June, LexisNexis tapped Harvey to build tools on top of its primary law content and citations graph.
Even as more law firms purchase software licenses, not every shiny new tool succeeds in practice. Surveys of lawyers routinely find high intent but spotty adoption. A 2024 survey from the American Bar Association found just 30% of respondents said their offices were using AI tools. The bigger the firm, the higher the uptake: nearly half of lawyers at firms with 500 or more attorneys reported some use, compared with less than a fifth of solo practitioners.
Last week, a Reddit user claiming to be a former Harvey employee alleged that uptake was low, the product was mostly used by first-year lawyers, and churn only looked low because many customers were locked into multi-year contracts, which can prop up retention rates.
The user later deleted their account, and there’s no public evidence that they ever worked at Harvey. Business Insider was unable to reach the user for comment.
The conversation then moved to other platforms, where reactions ranged from skepticism to schadenfreude.
Satisfied customers posted glowing reviews. Without calling out Harvey, Anna Guo, a legal benchmarking researcher, argued that large funding rounds often fuel land grabs over product development or support. Competitors piled on: one called Harvey “a classic example” of growth at all costs, another lamented that the Reddit drama was a buzzkill for the industry.
“At Harvey, we deal in fact, not fiction,” a Harvey spokesperson told Business Insider on Tuesday. “We are grateful to the many customers and users of Harvey who spoke up, reached out, and renewed with us this week and are focused on making them really proud they chose Harvey.”
The gorilla with $800 million in funding
The takes were still flying when, over the weekend, Harvey’s CEO entered the chat.
On LinkedIn, Winston Weinberg shared internal metrics tackling the Redditor’s claims. “I know it’s pretty uncommon for startups to post these,” he wrote, before laying out renewal stats, “since folks seem curious.” He reported a gross revenue retention of 98% in the most recent third quarter, seat utilization at 77%, and, in his words, a “vast majority” of clients renewing early.
Last month, Harvey added a few new names to its client marquee, including Latham & Watkins, the second-highest-grossing law firm in the world, and the asset manager Blue Owl Capital. It also announced a partnership with leading law schools to teach its tools in the curriculum.
The hype isn’t only orbiting Harvey. It’s creating gravity for its competitors, too.
Swedish startup Legora began this year as Europe’s answer to Harvey and looks to end it as a real contender. The company told Business Insider that sign-ups from law firms and corporate legal teams climbed from 250 to 400 in the last six months. It has customers in 40 markets.
The attention isn’t evenly distributed, however. If the Reddit post had been about Legora, as industry consultant Zach Abramowitz put it, it likely would have come and gone. “The Reddit post itself didn’t tell us anything new,” he wrote on his blog. “It was catnip for Harvey-haters.”
The Reddit skirmish revealed a paradox: Harvey’s critics say lawyers aren’t using it, but the fact that everyone’s talking about it shows how much space it occupies in the market’s imagination.
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