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Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Semantics-based Search Engine Omnity Seeks to Revolutionize Litigation, Patent Case Preparation

, Legaltech News

The startup, which was seeded by the National Science Foundation, uses semantic searches to find hidden patterns between documents.

For everything outside of the deep web, lawyer and layman alike can navigate today’s sea of information’s through search engines, a critical piece of infrastructure for any web user or e-discovery practitioner. But as data growth and complexity show no sign of slowing, are today’s conventional search engines able to keep up?

One new entrant in the field is betting the time is ripe for a new search approach. The recently launched Omnity knowledge discovery and research engine seeks to revolutionize search engine capabilities by focusing on more than just connecting a files and data to a few specific terms.

“Traditional search engines are based upon keyword search”, explained CEO Brian Sager to Legaltech News. “Omnity can search using entire documents as queries, not just keywords. This avoids the need to select a small number of words to represent a complex or nuanced concept, as is often the case with legal documents.”

This semantics-based search goes beyond finding related documents via links or citations, and instead finds what the company describes as “hidden semantic patterns.” Sager noted that this process “uses the rare text in a document to connect to the rare text in other documents.”

“The fundamental technology is based on determining the shared, rare words in documents by first constructing for each document a mathematical equation describing the statistical distribution of rare words in that document, then matching documents by the similarities of their mathematical equations,” he added.

Omnity markets the search engine to legal professionals, noting that it was developed with advisory support from legal experts, and pulls together “a wide range of documents together, including U.S. issued and pending patents, US case law, SEC filings, courseware, news articles, technical and scientific articles, which may help with patent prosecution as well as technically-focused litigation,” Sager said.

Where the search engine can help, Sager added, is in finding “the 99 percent of legal documents that are not directly linked to one another, but are highly semantically related.”

Developed by research scientists and engineers, Omnity’s initial seed funding came from the National Science Foundation, which provided grants for its early development. Sagar noted that the search engine has attracted additional private equity financing, but declined to reveal the specific amount raised.

While Omnity is free in its public version for all users, and in its academic version for those with an institutional email address, it charges subscriptions fee for its professional and executive versions. With these subscriptions, users can also add-on a legal bundle that contains “all post-1976 issued and pending patents, U.S. Case law, and Federal draft bills and legislation,” Sager said. 

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