A lot of the applications of Ai are going to have to go through "normal" innovation routes.
Eg low-end disruption. I have already seen "Ai lawyer" at play here.
A colleague of mine is involved in a long class action against a builder. The group chats have gone absolutely chaotic this year... as members consult heavily with LLMs and the (real) lawyer can't deal with the volume of action.
Another friend is a wholesaler and does a lot of small-scale commercial deals. Contracts have gotten bigger and negotiation has gotten more involved as "Ai lawyers" read and write these contracts.
Employment contracts are much more likely to be negotiated, referenced, etc.
So... These are all routes to "classic" disruptive innovation. It's not replacing billable hours at law firms. It is replacing non-consumption.
Law is adversarial. A formal legal letter requires a form of legal letter in response. Law generates its own demand.
I would be watching a lot more for ground up innovation, rather than adoption at firms.