Cambridge Disinformation Summit reposted this
Bueno Aires' judicial system now runs on ChatGPT, using GenAI to predict rulings and drafting sentences. More efficient, less bureaucracy, but then there's also AI bias, hallucinations, and data risk...does Argentina show us what our legal future looks like? Rest of World's latest: https://lnkd.in/gf_trnNA
Good god. Someone in Argentina didn’t read Kafka. And I’m not talking about The Trial, necessarily. Here’s one of his best parables: https://www.hup.harvard.edu/features/franz-kafka-before-the-law
In 20 years of legal practice I have seen so much bias and hallucination from Human-generated court rulings! At least such risks from AI have some form of consistency and can, if we want, be corrected. I am curious to see how Argentina will address that part
Hi there. I'd like to send you a message but my request is pending. Thanks
Andy Kleinman let's journey there soon. Looks like they've got the hang of things.
Guilty verdict first. Trial later, if at all. How’s that for efficiency?
Wow amazing reporting Victoria Mendizabal. And love seeing you working with Sophie Schmidt. Go Rest of World
FYI Tilman Rodenhäuser Samit D'Cunha
Hammad Khan has built the B2B version.
Ph.D. | Lawyer; Private International Law; International Family and Inheritance Law | Professor
4dWhat truly worries me is the statement by Attorney General Juan Corvalán: "We, as professionals, are not the main characters anymore. We have become editors". If the ratio decidendi of a judgment is now reduced to editing a textual prediction generated by a program that, in fact, does not reason, we have a very consistent picture of what the judiciary's future will look like. Lawyers using LLMs to present their cases, which will then be analyzed and adjudicated by LLMs that rely on a basis of LLMs previously generated decisions.