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Google used to surface the PDF of a law if you searched its exact name.
Now it surfaces consultancies advising on it.
And LLMs have gotten worse at this too. As they’ve tried to cut costs and focus on the information 99.99% of users want, long-tail edge-case data has become much harder to find.
Natalie Aresta-Katz was at a big law firm. One of their biggest clients wanted to track new and proposed laws in 45 countries that didn’t publish in English.
They hired lawyers in every single country. Tried probably 15 tools on the market. Ran manual searches.
Nothing worked well.
Now she's building the tool she wished she had.
One workflow went from up to 13 paralegals and around 120 hours a month to one user and about an hour and a half.
🎙️ Natalie Aresta-Katz, CEO & Founder of Regbase, on Fondo START pod (full ep in comments)
00:20 “Regbase was really born out of a place of necessity.”
01:32 Tracking new and proposed laws across 45 countries
02:00 Why existing tools failed
02:43 The “Wizard of Oz” backroom behind regulatory databases
03:26 Why long-tail legal data is getting harder to find
04:23 Dropping into YC after Andrew said, “an MBA isn’t really school”
05:37 Finding unspent state-level funding for school safety upgrades
07:05 From 120 hours to about 1.5 hours
07:38 How Regbase uses LLMs, specialty search, and link-following
08:33 Why legal work may shift from hourly billing to output
09:38 Searching laws in languages teams don’t speak
10:27 Why Regbase unlocks more opportunity for law firms
11:00 Who should book a demo: government vendors, corporate lawyers, AI law trackers, employment lawyers, and teams tracking high-volume regulatory change
visit regbase.com to learn more