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The effect has been to stifle innovation and competition in the field of legal information and, I would argue, to impede justice and the rule of law. million pages from 39,796 books and converted it all into machine-readable text files. Case law books waiting to be scanned. We didn’t have all the books we needed.
Benjamin Alarie and Abdi Aidid are legal experts who are heavily involved in the development of legal technology. They are releasing a new book, The Legal Singularity: How Artificial Intelligence Can Make Law Radically Better later this year. Marlene Gebauer 1:03 So before we dive into the book, Abdi.
And I don’t just mean listen to their legal problems, but listen to what was bothering them about professional life generally, or life in a large complex organization, or maybe with a change in leadership, or a lack of technology or resources in the environment they were working in. And that was really rewarding for me.
the core value is legaladvice, which means that’s the most high value activity you should provide to your clients and continue to do that. It wasn’t just oh, we have a book of $5 million. If you enjoyed the show, share it with a colleague, we’d love to hear from you. And everything else that’s non essential to that.
This drive towards creating new ways of accessing the legal system at low cost motivates a new generation of lawyers to think differently. It’s nice to see a law school impacting a lawyer’s thinking about improving the delivery of legal services through legal technology.
Defining the Practice of Law The reaction of the organized bar to software as a solution to people’s legal problems may be reactionary. I often hear lawyers say these solutions are inferior. I argued that since the legal profession wasn’t serving 80% of consumers anyway, we should continue to experiment with legal software solutions.
The effect has been to stifle innovation and competition in the field of legal information and, I would argue, to impede justice and the rule of law. million pages from 39,796 books and converted it all into machine-readable text files. Case law books waiting to be scanned. We didn’t have all the books we needed.
Benjamin Alarie and Abdi Aidid are legal experts who are heavily involved in the development of legal technology. They are releasing a new book, The Legal Singularity: How Artificial Intelligence Can Make Law Radically Better later this year. Marlene Gebauer 1:03 So before we dive into the book, Abdi.
We don’t provide legaladvice, even if we’re lawyers. I started reading the rule books, on my own, to learn what the practice was, and then it just built from there. Those attorneys, they want to hear what they want to hear. AMBROGI: All right, I’m going to put you to the challenge.
And I don’t just mean listen to their legal problems, but listen to what was bothering them about professional life generally, or life in a large complex organization, or maybe with a change in leadership, or a lack of technology or resources in the environment they were working in. And that was really rewarding for me.
Or it could be books. It could be the, you know, Google has a real ability to look at most of the books in the world, through the HathiTrust, and so on. They tend to be locked up in books, which are protected by copyright, and so on. The information presented here does not constitute legaladvice.
Joy] 26:50 We’re really interested in hearing about how the prohibited practice of redlining ties into this issue. The information presented here does not constitute legaladvice. But in the meantime, so long because you’re a monopolist, you’re subject to these conditions of regulation.
So the obstacle is figuring out whether we actually want to be providing legaladvice, which is a derivative of publicly available data sources, like law teacher dotnet, and law dotnet, and all these websites. We’d love to hear from you. And as always, the music you hear is from Jerry David DeCicca Thank you, Jerry.
the core value is legaladvice, which means that’s the most high value activity you should provide to your clients and continue to do that. It wasn’t just oh, we have a book of $5 million. If you enjoyed the show, share it with a colleague, we’d love to hear from you. And everything else that’s non essential to that.
They are transformative, they've ingested every single book that has ever been written and the entirety of the internet.” And, in terms of law, LLM also has access to “the entirety of the legal sphere.” So, for those who have already managed yesterday’s skills, what technologies should they have inside their work?
So the obstacle is figuring out whether we actually want to be providing legaladvice, which is a derivative of publicly available data sources, like law teacher dotnet, and law dotnet, and all these websites. We’d love to hear from you. And as always, the music you hear is from Jerry David DeCicca Thank you, Jerry.
We’d love to hear your thoughts on what value you see in ChatGPT and GPT 3.5 in the legal industry. And so like when I when I describe it to people, it’s like, you know, if you’re comfortable with getting your your legaladvice from Chora or just from your first five results from Google? We’d love to hear from you.
And I think one of the things that a lot of people worry about, I think, actually, they should probably flip and worry the in the other direction is that you’re going to see things like this, and you’re going to hear people go, Oh, if they’re not coming to me for that any more than you know what, what use, am I? We’d love to hear from you.
And with technology, you there’s a great book you’ve probably read it’s from Paul, Dorothy human plus machine, and they show a lot of example where the computer they’ll slide 80% And then the human is also 80%. We’d love to hear from you. Look, those average humans on Monday morning or Friday afternoon can be 30% equality.
Often you’ll hear government agencies say, “Well, when you drive down the street, you don’t have an expectation of privacy.” And it’s one that the ACLU is thinking a lot about, and how to bring it into the digital age, and it’s one that we’re going to hear more about in the coming years. 4, 2022).
And I think one of the things that a lot of people worry about, I think, actually, they should probably flip and worry the in the other direction is that you’re going to see things like this, and you’re going to hear people go, Oh, if they’re not coming to me for that any more than you know what, what use, am I? We’d love to hear from you.
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