Prepare privileged client files for AI without sending them to the cloud.

NeuroAIgent is a local-first desktop tool that turns a law firm’s private case files, PDFs, contracts, correspondence, and notes; into clean, structured, AI-ready data on your own machine. Nothing is uploaded to the cloud, so privileged and confidential material never leaves your control. Firms use it to make matter files searchable and ready for AI review, summarization, and retrieval without putting attorney-client privilege at risk.

Why firms use a local-first tool

Consumer AI tools process inputs on shared infrastructure, and their data-retention terms have created real confidentiality and privilege concerns for client work. Bar guidance holds attorneys responsible for protecting client information whenever they use AI. Keeping file preparation local lets a firm get its documents AI-ready while keeping sensitive material off third-party servers.

What you get

  • Privilege-safe by design: files are processed locally, with no cloud upload and no third-party data retention.
  • Works on the files you already have: messy mixed folders become structured, searchable records.
  • No IT project required: a desktop workflow, not a self-hosted server build.
  • Inspectable and traceable: metadata, source references, and processing logs for every output.

Who it’s for

Solo, small, and midsize firms; in-house and general-counsel teams; litigation, IP, and corporate practices handling sensitive matter files.

bring ~50 representative files and see AI-ready output before committing

FAQ

Does NeuroAIgent upload our client files to the cloud?

No. Processing runs locally on your own device; files are not sent to external servers, so privileged material stays under your control.

Can it help us use AI without risking attorney-client privilege?

It prepares your files locally so sensitive material can stay out of consumer AI tools whose terms may retain or train on your data. You decide where files go next. (This is product information, not legal advice.)

What kinds of legal files can it process?

PDFs and scans, Word documents, spreadsheets, images, and notes, including mixed folders of discovery, contracts, correspondence, and case materials.

What do we get out of it?

Clean, structured records: extracted text, metadata, chunked JSONL, and search-ready outputs, plus source references and processing logs for each file.

Do we need an IT team or servers to run it?

No. It’s a desktop workflow designed for firms without dedicated AI or data-engineering staff.

How do we try it on our own files?

Run a 48-hour file readiness pilot: bring about 50 representative files and see structured, AI-ready output before you commit.