Businesses that never thought of themselves as technology companies are suddenly building technology. A marketing agency may create an AI workflow that drafts and routes client campaigns, a medical practice may build an intake-and-triage automation on top of an LLM and an accounting firm may create a custom tool that turns raw financials into client-ready reports. 

LumaLex Law is doing this too. We are investing real time, money, and engineering resources into proprietary technology that helps our firm operate better. But as more companies build internal AI tools, a legal question is becoming harder to ignore: when the employee, contractor, consultant, or agency that built the tool leaves, who actually owns it?

Many business owners assume the answer is obvious…If the company paid for the work, the company must own it, but that assumption can be wrong. In the AI era, getting ownership wrong can create serious problems when someone leaves, when a dispute arises, or when the company raises capital, gets acquired, or tries to license what it built. This is why a proprietary rights agreement, sometimes called a Proprietary Information and Inventions Assignment Agreement, IP assignment agreement, or confidentiality and proprietary rights agreement, matters.

The Default Rules May Not Protect the Business

The default legal rules do not always give a company the clean ownership it assumes it has and the answer often depends on who created the work, what type of work it is, and whether the company had the right written agreement in place. For employees, copyright ownership is usually the simplest part. Work created by an employee within the scope of their job is generally treated as “work made for hire,” which means the employer owns the copyright by default. But copyright is only one part of the analysis.

Patentable inventions are different. Without a written agreement, an invention generally belongs to the individual who created it, not automatically to the employer, even if it was created on company time or using company resources. Courts may sometimes give the employer limited “shop rights” or apply a “hired to invent” theory, but those arguments are fact-specific and unpredictable. They are not a clean ownership strategy.

The biggest trap is often contractors and consultants. When an independent contractor builds software or custom technology, the work-made-for-hire doctrine usually does not apply in the same way. Without a signed assignment, the outside developer may own the copyright in the tool the company paid them to build. The company may have a license to use it, but not full ownership, not the unrestricted right to modify it, and not the clean title needed to sell the company or license the technology to others.

A proprietary rights agreement fixes that problem by putting ownership in writing before there is a dispute.

AI Did Not Create the Ownership Problem. It Made It Common.

For years, invention assignment and proprietary rights agreements were mostly associated with software companies, R&D teams, and businesses that clearly viewed themselves as technology companies. AI changed that.

LLMs have turned employees across departments into builders. A customer-service lead can create automations. An operations manager can design prompt libraries and internal agents. An associate can build document-generation tools. Valuable technology is now being created by people whose job descriptions may never have mentioned software, invention, or product development. That is where many companies are exposed. The business may be building valuable internal technology without realizing it has not secured ownership of the assets behind it.

AI also creates a newer ownership issue. The U.S. Copyright Office has taken the position that purely AI-generated material, without meaningful human authorship, is not protectable by copyright. That means the raw AI output may sit in a gray area, but the most valuable parts of the system are often not just the raw output. The architecture, code written around the model, prompt engineering, workflows, fine-tuning data, configurations, human curation, and editing may be protectable as copyrightable works, trade secrets, or both.Those are the assets a proprietary rights agreement is designed to capture for the company.

Why Confidentiality Matters More in AI Workflows

AI tools are not only about ownership. They also raise confidentiality and trade-secret concerns.

Prompts, system designs, automation playbooks, workflows, and internal agent structures may become competitive advantages. If an employee or contractor can leave with those materials, recreate them elsewhere, or sell a similar version to a competitor, the business may lose more than a tool. It may lose the operational advantage the tool created.

A strong confidentiality and proprietary rights agreement should treat these materials as company assets and trade secrets. It should also make clear that departing personnel must return company materials and cannot walk away with the company’s internal systems, prompt libraries, or automation playbooks.

When Ownership Problems Usually Surface

These issues often become visible at the worst possible time. The first common moment is when someone leaves. A contractor may finish a flagship automation, get into a fee dispute months later, and claim they own the tool. A key employee may leave and take “their” prompt library or internal agents with them. Without clear written assignments, the company may end up in a fight over whether it owns the technology it built and paid for.

The second moment is during a financing, acquisition, or investor diligence process. Venture funds and private equity firms increasingly want to confirm that the company, not its founders, employees, contractors, or consultants personally, owns the technology on the balance sheet.

If the company’s IP chain of title has gaps, the consequences can be significant. A deal may be delayed. Reps and warranties may become harder to give. Investors or buyers may demand holdbacks, escrows, repricing, or additional cleanup before closing. In some cases, an ownership issue can put the deal at risk entirely.

Signed proprietary rights agreements are one of the simplest ways to show clean ownership. Their absence can become a major diligence problem.

What a Strong Proprietary Rights Agreement Should Cover

A good proprietary rights agreement is not just a generic template. It should be drafted to clearly capture the types of work and technology the company needs to own.

One of the most important details is present-tense assignment language. The agreement should say the individual “hereby assigns” rights to the company, not merely that they “agree to assign” rights later. That distinction can matter because “agree to assign” may leave the company with only a promise, not an actual transfer. The scope should also be broad enough to cover inventions, software, works of authorship, designs, prompts, models, workflows, and related know-how created in connection with the work.

The agreement should include a prior-invention carve-out so employees or contractors can identify what they already owned before joining or starting the engagement. This protects both sides and helps avoid future disputes over pre-existing work. State-law compliance also matters as some states, including California through Labor Code §2870, limit how far invention assignments can reach into an employee’s personal, off-the-clock work. Agreements that ignore those limits may be partially unenforceable. A strong agreement should also include confidentiality and trade-secret protections, a moral-rights waiver, an obligation to return company materials at departure, and a further assurances clause requiring cooperation on future filings or transfers.

Most importantly, the agreement should cover everyone who builds. That includes employees, contractors, consultants, freelancers, agencies, and outside developers. The contractor gap is often where companies are most exposed.

Why This Matters for Growing Companies

In the AI era, many companies are creating proprietary technology without realizing it. They may not call it software. They may call it a workflow, an automation, a prompt library, an internal agent, or an efficiency tool. But if it makes the business faster, better, or harder to replicate, it may be valuable company IP.

The law will not automatically hand the company clean ownership of that technology, especially when contractors are involved or when AI-generated work is part of the process. The practical fix is simple: get the right agreements signed before there is a dispute, a departure, or a diligence request.

Putting proprietary rights agreements in place is faster and less expensive than fighting over ownership later. It is also one of the highest-leverage legal steps a growing business can take as AI becomes part of everyday operations.

FAQ

What is a proprietary rights agreement?

A proprietary rights agreement is a contract that assigns ownership of work, inventions, software, confidential information, and related intellectual property to the company. It is often also called a Proprietary Information and Inventions Assignment Agreement, IP assignment agreement, or confidentiality and proprietary rights agreement.

Does a company automatically own code a contractor writes?

Not always. When an independent contractor builds software or custom technology, the company may not own the copyright without a signed assignment. The company may only have a license to use the work, which can create problems later.

Do employees automatically assign inventions to their employer?

Not always. Employee-created copyrightable work may be owned by the employer if it is created within the scope of employment, but patentable inventions are different. Without a written agreement, the invention may belong to the individual who created it.

Who owns AI-generated work?

Purely AI-generated material without meaningful human authorship may not be eligible for copyright protection. However, the surrounding architecture, code, workflows, prompt engineering, fine-tuning data, configurations, and human curation may still be valuable assets that should be protected.

Why do investors care about proprietary rights agreements?

Investors and buyers want to confirm that the company owns the technology it claims to own. Gaps in the IP chain of title can create diligence issues, delayed closings, reps-and-warranties problems, holdbacks, escrows, repricing, or deal risk.

Talk to LumaLex Law About Proprietary Rights Agreements

LumaLex Law works with founders and growth-stage companies across emerging and regulated industries to protect what they build, including the technology they are now building with AI.

If you want to review your existing agreements or put proprietary rights agreements in place across your team, Schedule a Consultation with us to discuss the right structure for your business.

Disclaimer: This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Telehealth and healthcare rules vary by state and change frequently. Consult qualified counsel about your specific facts. 

Ian Horowitz

Ian Horowitz

Of-Counsel
States Licensed: FL

Mr. Horowitz focuses his practice on estate planning, taxation, and business related matters, with advanced proficiency in estate, gift, federal income, and generation-skipping transfer taxation. His extensive knowledge in these areas enables him to craft tailored strategies that optimize tax efficiency and safeguard his clients’ assets. From crafting straightforward wills to designing complex domestic and foreign trusts, his commitment to preserving wealth and ensuring asset protection is unwavering.

In addition to his prowess in estate planning, Mr. Horowitz serves as a trusted advisor to businesses of all sizes from formation to sale assisting with drafting purchase and sale agreements, limited liability operating agreements, or other corporate documents. His counsel on entity formation and tax-efficient structures empowers entrepreneurs and corporations to make informed decisions that drive growth and prosperity.

Mr. Horowitz possesses a wealth of experience in international tax matters. He offers invaluable guidance to foreign clients navigating inbound business and real estate transactions in the United States. He is also recognized for his efficiency in helping individuals become bona fide residents of Puerto Rico under IRC Section 937. This specialized knowledge in tax strategies related to Puerto Rico’s unique tax laws positions him as a sought-after advisor for those seeking to take advantage of the favorable tax incentives offered by Puerto Rico.

Aggeliki Psonis

Aggeliki Psonis

Associate
States Licensed: NY, NJ. MA

A graduate of Boston University, with a JD from CUNY law school, Aggeliki focuses her practice on real estate transactions, estate planning and administration, business law and general litigation. She has extensive experience representing buyers, sellers, investors and business owners based in New York and internationally.

Aggeliki is admitted in the states of New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, as well as in the Eastern and Southern Districts of New York. She is also a licensed Real Estate broker. She is a proud member of the Inspiring Women in Law League (IWILL) and the Hellenic Lawyers Association. She speaks fluent Greek and conversational French and Spanish. Aside from lawyering, she enjoys being a radio producer and performing artist.

Dallas Robinson, Of-Counsel

Dallas Robinson

Of-Counsel
States Licensed: FL

 

Dallas Robinson is an AV Preeminent-rated trial attorney who has dedicated his practice to representing injured people throughout Florida. Dallas has litigated and tried many different types of personal injury cases in numerous courthouses and venues in Florida. Dallas believes in prosecuting personal injury cases in a professional and aggressive manner, and has a clear track record of success in obtaining great financial compensation for his clients either through verdicts or settlements. Many lawyers advertise ‘trial experience,’ but have actually never seen the inside of a courtroom. Dallas has spent his entire career in the courtroom and litigating cases. This gives Dallas the real and true experience that it takes to strike fear in the hearts of insurance companies and obtain top financial compensation for his injured clients.

 

Dallas grew up in South Florida and attended Boston University where he played quarterback and defensive back for Boston University’s football team. Dallas graduated in 4 years with bachelor degrees in Classical Civilizations and History. He went straight to law school and attended University of Miami (FL) School of Law. Dallas graduated in 2002 with a Juris Doctorate degree and immediately passed the Florida Bar.

 

Dallas began his legal career representing businesses and insurance companies in workers’ compensation and personal injury cases. This gave him unique insight into exactly how insurance companies work and how they value cases. After achieving a high level of success in litigating these cases, Dallas moved on to representing the injured. Since that time, Dallas has obtained tens of millions of dollars in compensation for his clients through settlements and trial verdicts. Dallas is a member of the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum which is an association of attorneys who have won seven-figure verdicts and settlements on behalf of their clients. This group is one of the most prestigious organizations for trial lawyers in the United States as fewer than 1% of U.S. lawyers have qualified as members.

 

In addition to great results for his clients, Dallas has also gained the respect of his peers for his ethics, ability, and professionalism. Dallas has received the highest level of distinction of an AV ® rated attorney by Martindale-Hubbell, which recognizes Dallas as possessing “Very High-Preeminent” legal ability with “Very High” ethical standards.

Yisroel Szpigiel, Of-Counsel

Yisroel Szpigiel

Of-Counsel States Licensed: NY, NJ  
Yisroel Szpigiel is a NY/NJ corporate attorney focused on outside general counsel and commercial transactions. With nearly a decade of experience managing law firms, he represents entrepreneurs, investors, and some of New York’s largest real estate developers in matters ranging across the full business lifecycle– from entity formation and early stage growth to day-to-day commercial contracting to complex financings, acquisitions, and strategic exits. He has closed over $100 million in transactions and is known for practical, business-first legal guidance that protects clients while keeping deals moving. 
 
Since joining LumaLex Law as Managing Partner January 2025, Yisroel has grown the firms Commercial Transactional and Real Estate Practices, and has started the firms MSO practice, focusing on private equity healthcare rollups. Yisroel is best known as a “problem solver”, with the ability to turn complex problems into workable solutions. He was twice named as a Super Lawyers New York Rising Star in 2024 and 2025, in the practice areas of Business Law, Real Estate, Mergers and Acquisitions, and Plaintiff’s Personal Injury.

In addition to his work with LumaLex Law and serving as trusted outside counsel to businesses in a wide range of industries, he has been recognized by community leaders with citations and awards. Yisroel earned his undergraduate degree from Rutgers University and his J.D. from Hofstra University School of Law, where he later returned as an adjunct professor. Outside the office, he enjoys golf, pickleball, and traveling with his wife and three children. 
Tom Dean | Of-Counsel

Tom Dean

Of-Counsel 
States Licensed: AZ

 

Tom Dean has been an attorney advocate for nationwide cannabis policy reform for over 25 years. As Legal Director for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) he initiated, managed, and litigated important cannabis related cases of national importance to the cannabis industry/community. In that capacity, he also coordinated the efforts of the NORML Legal Committee (lifetime member) and NORML Amicus Committee (former chair) in key cases throughout the U.S.  In 2015 the organization recognized his successful advocacy by inducting him into the NORML Distinguished Counsel’s Circle. He remains an active member of the NORML Legal Committee.

In 2016, Tom received the President’s Commendation award from the Arizona Attorneys for Criminal Justice (AACJ). In 2020, Tom received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Errl Cup, a medical marijuana event producer which includes Arizona’s premier cannabis awards festival (30,000 attendees this year).

In 2021, Tom received Mikel Weiser Lifetime Achievement Award from Arizona’s Marijuana Industry Trade Association (MITA). Most recently, in 2023, Tom was honored by NORML with its Al Horn Award, which the organization awards to an attorney each year to in “recognition of a lifetime of ceaseless work to advance the cause of justice” in cannabis law.

Tom was a founding member of the Arizona Cannabis Bar Association (ACBA), an organization that seeks to educate lawyers and the public of the many unique aspects of cannabis law and emerging cannabis related areas of practice. He continues to serve on the board of ACBA. Outside of his practice, Tom enjoys, among other things, presenting at cannabis related seminars and conferences for lawyers and the public.

Josh Sanderlin | Of Counsel

Joshua Sanderlin

Of Counsel
States Licensed: MD, D.C.

Joshua Sanderlin is an experienced cannabis attorney and government affairs expert barred in Maryland and the District of Columbia. He has worked in the cannabis industry since 2013. At that time, he was an attorney and lobbyist at a large, global law firm. His experience working with clients in the earliest legal cannabis market in the U.S. sparked his interest in the field and motivated him to leave big law for the world of cannabis.

Since then, he has served as a lawyer and consultant to clients working in markets across the country, including seven states and the District of Columbia. His experience has given him a wide breadth of knowledge on issues touching the industry and, just as importantly, expanded his network to include experts from all across the industry. Having worked on cannabis issues in a variety of settings, Joshua understands that the industry is best served by specialized services.

Edgar J. Asebey | Of Counsel

Edgar J. Asebey

Of Counsel
States Licensed: FL, D.C.

 

Edgar J. Asebey is a regulatory and transactional attorney with over two decades of experience in federal regulation of pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical device, food, dietary supplement and cosmetics companies. Since 2015, he has been working on Cannabis-related matters and transactions and since 2018 he has provide regulatory compliance, business transactional, venture finance and international trade services to hemp/CBD companies. Edgar brings a wealth of knowledge and over 20 years of experience to life science, Cannabis and hemp/CBD clients who require novel solutions to complex issues.

Edgar practices before the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), representing client companies on regulatory compliance, product approval/registration and FDA enforcement defense matters. He also assists clients with international and domestic business transactions, IP licensing, venture finance, trademark protection and import/export matters.

Edgar studied molecular biology at the University of Chicago and spent 5 years working in molecular biology research laboratories at the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois.  Early in his career he served as a Patent and Licensing Advisor to the Natural Products Branch of the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).  He founded and served as president of Andes Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a natural products drug discovery company, from 1994 to 2000 and has served as in-house counsel to two life sciences companies. Most recently he was an equity partner in the Health Care & Life Sciences Practice Group at Jones Day. Edgar is currently a partner at Keller Asebey Life Science Law, PLLC.

While Edgar holds licenses to practice law in Florida and Washington, D.C. he can represent clients on federal regulatory matters in all 50 states.  He is a member of the American Bar Association (Section on Administrative Law & Regulatory Practice: Food and Drug Committee and International Committee), Food & Drug Law Institute (FDLI), Dade County Bar Association, and BioFlorida.

Dan Miller Head-Shot | Of-Counsel

Dan Miller

Of-Counsel
States Licensed: CA

Dan Miller, Esq., with over 15 years of experience in cannabis law and a growing expertise in psychedelics, is a staunch advocate for honoring both traditional and evolving regulated uses of these substances. A Vermont Law School alumnus (Class of 1998), he holds a J.D. and a Master’s in Environmental Law and Policy.

Before his foray into the world of entheogenic medicines, Dan honed his skills as a trial attorney with a focus on both criminal and civil cases. His passion for and in-depth understanding of cannabis and psychedelic substances redirected his career path, leading him to develop a niche practice area that has since become his hallmark.

Dan’s role in the cannabis industry is not just as a lawyer, but as a partner in his clients’ endeavors. He oversees all aspects of business development, from structural planning and licensing to adapting to dynamic legal landscapes. His strategic insights have been key in securing licenses, operational planning, and facilitating interstate business growth.

Dan continues to serve as outside general counsel for various businesses, leveraging his litigation background to offer comprehensive legal advice.

As the legal landscape continues to evolve, Dan Miller remains a steadfast and knowledgeable advocate, committed to bridging the gap between traditional use and modern regulatory frameworks in the world of cannabis and psychedelics.

States Licensed: CA

Christina Jaramillo | Junior Associate

Christina Jaramillo

Junior Associate
States Licensed: FL, CA

Christina Jaramillo is an Associate Attorney at LumaLex Law and an active member of The Florida Bar. Christina’s primary focus has been in the practice area of business transactions. Christina has legal experience drafting and reviewing various sales and services agreements, completing entity filings and EIN applications, drafting corporate governance documents and business plans, preparing franchise disclosure documents, drafting and reviewing commercial and residential lease agreements, assisting with mergers and acquisitions, preparing demand letters, working on estate plans and probate matters, and trademarks. Prior to joining LumaLex Law, Christina led the estate planning department at The Law For All, P.A.

Christina is the daughter of two Latinx immigrants, the youngest of five siblings, and the first member of her immediate family to graduate from college. In 2017, after just three short years on campus, Christina received her Bachelor of Science in Political Science, magna cum laude, from Florida State University, where she also minored in Economics. Christina received her Juris Doctor, magna cum laude, from the University of Miami School of Law in 2020.

While attending the University of Miami School of Law, Christina received several honors: Christina was nominated to serve as one of two Articles & Comments Editors for the University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review; Christina was a recipient of the Dean’s Certificate of Achievement Award, which is awarded to the top one or two students in the course, in Legal Communications & Research II; and Christina made the Dean’s List twice.

During her time in law school, Christina served as a Fellow and Blog Editor for the Professional Responsibility and Ethics Program (PREP), an intern for the Human Rights Clinic, and a Civil Procedure Dean’s Fellow. Christina was active on campus and engaged in her community because she understood the value in connecting with those around her and serving the needs of her community, which remains true today.

In her free time, Christina can be found at her local comic book shop or vegan bakery. Christina loves to read, stay up to date on popular television shows and movies, watch soccer, and occasionally jog.

Andy Sick | Partner

Andy Sick

Partner
States Licensed: NY, NJ, MI, CT

Andy Sick has been advising businesses, startups, and entrepreneurs for nearly 15 years. He assists clients through every stage of the business life cycle from incorporation and initial growth phases, to maturity with ongoing general counsel services including regulatory compliance and critical commercial transactions, and dissolution. Licensed to practice in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, Andy is the attorney responsible for the firm’s practice in these states.

At Mr. Cannabis Law, Andy represents various cannabis-related businesses on such matters as corporate structuring, licensing, and financing. He navigates clients through the constantly changing sea of cannabis rules and regulations. Andy handles marijuana license applications, business plans, and operating procedures for dispensaries, cultivators, nurseries, manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers, delivery services, and testing facilities. For the firm’s hemp industry clients, Andy helps obtain hemp licenses and maintain compliance with federal and state regulations. In the psychedelic space, Andy has served as a legal advisor to numerous non-profits, companies, and organizations including such groups as Decriminalize Nature and the Native American Church.

Andy began his legal career at boutique law firms serving as outside general counsel to businesses and representing clients in complex commercial litigation. Whether representing a three-person video game startup or a multinational spent nuclear fuel storage company, Andy worked directly with company presidents and other executives to develop and implement corporate legal strategies. Subsequently, he founded several startups, including a legal technology company that adapted artificial intelligence and virtual reality for use in the law. In addition to working with Mr. Cannabis Law, Andy has his own law firm, Sick Legal, which provides business and commercial transactional services to a range of clients.

During law school, Andy worked at the U.S. Justice Department’s Office of Consumer Litigation, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of New York, and for President Joe Biden when he served on the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee

Andy is responsible for firm operations in New York, New Jersey, Michigan, and Connecticut 

Amanda Barton | Partner

Amanda Barton

Partner
States Licensed: FL

Amanda Barton is an active member of the Florida Bar and is admitted to practice in all U.S. District Courts and U.S. Bankruptcy Courts within the state of Florida.  Amanda has over ten years of legal experience handling complex corporate matters, with a strong focus on corporate governance, corporate finance, and regulatory compliance.  As someone who loves written language, Amanda excels in drafting and negotiating a vast array of legal documents.

Prior to joining LumaLex Law, Amanda had unique legal opportunities that have made her a well-versed, seasoned transactional business attorney.  Previously, she led the transactional department at The Law for All, P.A., where she assisted business clients with strategic business structuring, mergers and acquisitions, asset protection, business succession planning, and contract drafting, including companies involved in the cannabis and hemp industry.  She served as senior in-house counsel for an alternative financing company, where she built a legal department that leveraged technology, data analysis, and innovative resolution and recovery strategies.  Amanda also served as in-house counsel to a private investment firm, where she handled all in-house transactions with a concentration in Debtor-in-Possession financing for Chapter 11 debtors, secured lending transactions, fund management, and various aspects of municipal bond financing.

Amanda currently volunteers her time to serve as the President of the Broward County chapter of CannabisLAB, a networking and education group for professionals who are in or are looking to get involved in the cannabis marketplace.

Dustin Robinson | Managing Partner

DUSTIN ROBINSON

Founding Partner
States Licensed: FL

Dustin Robinson is the Founding Partner of LumaLex Law. Licensed in Florida as an Attorney, Certified Public Accountant, and Real Estate Agent, Robinson brings a rare, fully integrated legal–financial–business perspective to every engagement. His practice focuses on corporate structuring, regulatory strategy, transactions, capital formation, and high-stakes commercial litigation for growth-stage and emerging-market companies across a wide range of industries.

Before launching LumaLex Law, Robinson trained at two of the world’s most respected professional services firms—Deloitte and Holland & Knight—where he developed deep technical grounding in tax, corporate law, and complex commercial matters. He then left traditional practice to become an operator himself, applying his legal and accounting background to help run a multi-state manufacturing company that he helped grow to nearly $50 million in revenue. That experience shaped his core philosophy: great legal advice must be practical, entrepreneurial, and grounded in the realities of building and scaling real businesses.

Robinson is not only an advisor to entrepreneurs—he is one. In addition to LumaLex Law, he is the founder of multiple ventures, including Iter Investments , a venture capital fund backing frontier technologies and next-generation healthcare platforms; and Nucleus, a venture studio focused on launching digital and data-driven assets in emerging markets. Across his legal and investment platforms, Robinson has worked with founders operating in biotech, neurotech, telehealth, psychedelics, cannabis, fintech, real estate, digital media, AI-driven platforms, and other highly regulated or rapidly evolving sectors.

Widely regarded as a trailblazer in emerging industries, Robinson has played a leading role in shaping legal and commercial frameworks for novel business models long before they became mainstream. He has served as lead counsel in several high-profile commercial disputes, including the widely covered Shohei Ohtani 50–50 baseball litigation, and is frequently sought out for matters involving regulatory gray zones, innovative deal structures, and first-of-their-kind ventures.

Robinson also served on the Board of Directors of Clairvoyant Therapeutics, a biotechnology company that was advancing psilocybin-based treatments for alcohol use disorder through FDA clinical trials. He has advised and represented numerous venture-backed companies, founders, and investment vehicles operating at the intersection of science, technology, regulation, and capital markets.

Beyond legal practice and investing, Robinson is deeply involved in thought leadership and ecosystem-building. He created and moderates a long-running monthly panel series at Soho Beach House Miami, convening founders, physicians, scientists, investors, and cultural leaders to discuss innovation, wellness, and frontier technologies. Past guests have included NBA Champion Lamar Odom, NHL star Daniel Carcillo, and other prominent figures across business and entertainment.

Robinson has been regularly profiled and featured as an expert in major media outlets, including Bloomberg News, Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, INSIDER, VICE, The Miami Herald, Authority Magazine, Thrive Global, Benzinga, and others. He is a frequent speaker at global industry conferences and private founder and investor forums.

A triple Gator, Robinson earned his Bachelor’s in Accounting, Master’s in Accounting, and Juris Doctor from the University of Florida.

Today, Robinson’s work sits at the intersection of law, entrepreneurship, and capital formation. He is known for helping founders think bigger, structure smarter, and move faster—while staying compliant, investable, and defensible. His mission is simple: to help entrepreneurs build category-defining companies in industries that don’t yet have a playbook.