Contract Change Tracking for Clio Users

Clio tracks your internal contracts and matter documents. DriftPatrol tracks whether the published terms, SLAs, and counterparty agreements connected to those matters have changed since signing — catching contract drift before it affects your clients' rights or obligations.

The Gap in Your Current Stack

Practice management tools manage your internal workflow. Legal research databases index published law. AI drafting tools accelerate document production. None of them monitor the live external published pages — regulatory agency sites, vendor terms, published guidance — for changes that happen between your manual review cycles.

DriftPatrol fills that gap. Add any publicly accessible URL to your watchlist. Get a plain-English Monday brief covering what changed, what clause was modified, and which matters may require a follow-up review.

What Gets Monitored

Page TypeExamplesChange Frequency
Regulatory agency pagesCFPB, SEC, FTC, FDA, state bar sitesWeekly–Monthly
Vendor SLAs / DPAsCloud storage, software subscriptionsQuarterly (but unannounced)
Published counterparty termsSupplier agreements, distributor termsVariable
Industry association guidanceABA, state bar, trade assoc. positionsMonthly–Quarterly
Your own published pagesTerms of service, privacy policy monitoringAs-published

See DriftPatrol in action

Request a 20-minute demo. We'll show you live monitoring on URLs that matter to your firm.

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Frequently asked questions

Can I link DriftPatrol monitoring to specific Clio matters?

DriftPatrol allows you to label and group monitored URLs by matter, client, or practice area. While there is no direct Clio API integration, you can organize your watchlists to mirror your Clio matter structure and deliver change briefs to the relevant attorneys on each matter.

What contract types should Clio users monitor with DriftPatrol?

Clio users should add to DriftPatrol: published vendor SLAs (software subscriptions your clients rely on), data processing agreements, cloud service terms, regulatory safe harbor provisions referenced in client contracts, and any published counterparty policies incorporated by reference in executed agreements.