Your Documents, Organised. Your AI Drafts, Traceable.
If you have ever uploaded a copy of a High Court judgment, used it for one tool, and then gone hunting for the same file when you needed it elsewhere, that frustration is now behind you. If you have ever looked at an AI-drafted argument and wondered where it came from, you now have a direct answer.
Two updates landed this month. Together they make your workspace considerably more organised and your AI outputs considerably more trustworthy.
All your files, in one place
Everything you upload to Legal Desk AI (case papers, agreements, notices, precedent judgments, client correspondence) now flows into a single Uploads Library inside your workspace. It does not matter which tool you used to upload it. The library collects it all.
From there, you can download any file again whenever you need it. You can select and delete files in bulk if you want to keep things tidy. When you run any AI tool (Quick Draft, Legal Opinion, AI Analysis), you can simply pick from your library instead of uploading the same document all over again.
Think about what this means in practice. You upload a Supreme Court judgment once. That file is now available the next time you draft a petition, the next time you run an analysis, the next time the same matter requires you to reference it again. No more searching through your downloads folder. No more duplicate uploads. One library, every document, always accessible.
Know exactly where every AI output came from
The second change matters especially when you are filing or advising a client: every AI draft now shows its sources.
If the output draws from documents in your SMRITI library (the judgments, precedents, and case papers you have uploaded), those source documents are listed by name below the draft. You can see immediately which judgment was cited and trace the reference yourself before it goes into a pleading.
If the AI consulted live legal search results, those results appear as clickable links so you can open each source, read it, and decide whether to rely on it.
This is a meaningful improvement in how you can use AI outputs professionally. You are not guessing whether a citation is real or trusting a black box. You are looking at the source and making your own judgment, exactly as you would if a junior brought you a draft and you asked where they found it.
Your name goes on the pleading. You should know where every line came from. Now you do.
Open your workspace and explore the Uploads Library. Your files are already waiting for you there.
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