Artificial intelligence poses some distinct dangers to lawyers as evidenced by the cockup of the lawfirm of Morgan & Morgan in submitting a brief with bogus citations. It is hard to imagine a more serious dereliction of professional duty than in submitting a brief with citations to cases that do not exist, and which no lawyer could have ever have read and selected as appropriate to cite.[1] Apparently, a user of A.I. cannot simply direct the computer to stop making stuff up, any more than we ...| schachtmanlaw.com
Artificial intelligence poses some distinct dangers to lawyers as evidenced by the cockup of the lawfirm of Morgan & Morgan in submitting a brief with bogus citations. It is hard to imagine a more serious dereliction of professional duty than in submitting a brief with citations to cases that do not exist, and which no lawyer could have ever have read and selected as appropriate to cite.[1] Apparently, a user of A.I. cannot simply direct the computer to stop making stuff up, any more than we ...| schachtmanlaw.com
Several years ago, I submitted a brief, which I had written, in a New York case. When a co-defendant’s counsel filed the same brief, without acknowledging that it was plagiarised, I was annoyed. It seemed to me that such plagiarism clearly has professional and general ethical implications, especially if the plagiarists charged clients for writing something that they stole from another person.[1]| Schachtman Law
Artificial intelligence poses some distinct dangers to lawyers as evidenced by the cockup of the lawfirm of Morgan & Morgan in submitting a brief with bogus citations. It is hard to imagine a more serious dereliction of professional duty than in submitting a brief with citations to cases that do not exist, and which no lawyer could have ever have read and selected as appropriate to cite.[1] Apparently, a user of A.I. cannot simply direct the computer to stop making stuff up, any more than we ...| Schachtman Law