this post was submitted on 02 Jan 2024
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Supreme Court chief justice warns of dangers of AI in judicial work, suggests it is “always a bad idea” to cite non-existent court cases::Mr Roberts suggested there may come a time when conducting legal research without the help of AI is ‘unthinkable’

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 10 months ago

This is the best summary I could come up with:


Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts discussed AI and its possible impact on the judicial system in a year-end report published over the weekend.

Mr Roberts acknowledged that the emerging tech was likely to play an increased role in the work of attorneys and judges, but he did not expect to be fully replaced anytime soon.

In addition to those risks, popular LLM chatbots like ChatGPT and Google's Bard can produce false information — referred to as "hallucinations" rather than "mistakes" — which means users are rolling the dice anytime they take trust the bots without checking their work first.

Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's former lawyer and fixer, admitted that he had used an AI to look up court case records, which he then gave as a list of citations to his legal team.

Due to the potential pitfalls of AI reliance, Mr Roberts urged legal workers to exercise "caution and humility" when relying on the chatbots for their work.

The court has proposed a rule that would require lawyers to either certify that that did not rely on AI software to draft briefs, or that a human fact-checked and edited any text generated by a chatbot.


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