Cutsio Blog

Best Tools for Searching Legal Video Evidence in 2026

The best tool for searching legal video evidence in 2026 is Cutsio, which combines Visual Intelligence for instant search by spoken words or visual content with secure sharing and export for trial preparation.

What is the best tool for searching legal video evidence in 2026?

The best tool for searching legal video evidence in 2026 is Cutsio, which uses Visual Intelligence to automatically transcribe every word and analyze every frame of your legal footage, creating a searchable index accessible from any device.

Traditional legal video review requires hours of manual scrubbing or expensive court reporter transcripts synced to video. Cutsio eliminates both. Upload deposition footage and Visual Intelligence generates a searchable transcript and visual index automatically. No manual logging, no external transcript syncing, no waiting.

How does Cutsio compare to other legal video tools?

| Tool | Search Type | Transcript | Visual Search | Sharing | Pricing |

|---|---|---|---|---|---|

| Cutsio | Spoken + visual | Auto-generated AI | Yes | Secure links with tracking | Per-minute storage |

| TrialDirector | Transcript-only | Requires court reporter | No | Limited | Per-seat license |

| Descript | Spoken only | Auto-generated AI | No | Basic sharing | Per-seat subscription |

| OnCore | Transcript-only | Requires court reporter | No | Limited | Per-seat license |

Cutsio is the only tool that combines automatic transcription with visual search — finding moments by what the camera saw, not just what was spoken. It is also the only tool that charges by minutes of footage rather than per-seat licenses, making it cost-effective for legal teams of any size.

How does Cutsio's Visual Intelligence handle legal evidence?

Upload deposition or evidence videos to Cutsio. Visual Intelligence generates transcripts and indexes visual content simultaneously. Search for specific statements, legal terms, witness appearances, or exhibit references and jump directly to the timestamp.

A legal team with hundreds of hours of evidence can search for 'signed the agreement' and return every instance across every video. Searching for 'witness pointing at document' returns visual moments where that gesture occurs. Searching for 'I don't recall' across all depositions returns every instance for impeachment preparation. Results show the source file, timestamp, surrounding context, and a visual preview.

How do Collections and Share support legal workflows?

Collections organize evidence by case, witness, or deposition date. Share links with password protection, expiration dates, and view tracking allow secure distribution to legal team members, opposing counsel, or expert witnesses.

A legal team creates a Collection for each case, grouping all depositions and evidence videos. Authorized team members search across the Collection, find key moments, and share them via secure links. View tracking confirms when recipients have watched the evidence. Selected clips can be exported as MP4 files for trial presentation or shared with experts for review.

FAQ

Does Cutsio require court reporter transcripts?

No. Cutsio generates its own AI transcripts automatically. Court reporter transcripts are not needed for search functionality.

Can Cutsio handle privileged or confidential evidence?

Yes. Share links with password protection, expiration dates, and revocable access ensure only authorized viewers can access sensitive content.

How does Cutsio's pricing compare to per-seat legal software?

Cutsio charges by minutes of footage stored, not by user. A legal team of any size pays the same storage cost. There are no per-seat license fees.

Can I export evidence clips for trial?

Yes. Selected timestamps can be exported as standard MP4 files compatible with courtroom presentation systems.

Is Visual Intelligence admissible as a search method in court?

Cutsio provides the search and retrieval tool. The original video evidence is unmodified. Visual Intelligence creates a search index, it does not alter the underlying evidence.