Opinion: Lawyers Need to Be Careful When Using AI
Opinion: Lawyers Need to Be Careful When Using AI
Legal technology has often stirred my unwavering support as I am convinced of its potential to revolutionize the legal profession. By adopting these digital innovations, lawyers can turbocharge their productivity and shed mundane tasks, freeing up their time to do what they are best at, practice law.Technological innovation in law also creates a clear way to improve the access to justice problem by lowering the cost of legal services and thus making justice more accessible. There is no shortage of lawyers or a shortage of money in the world. Just a shortage of people willing to pay $350/hour for an indefinite number of hours.Ignoring these innovations may actually lead to potential pitfalls, such as violations of Law Society or State Bar rules. These laws say that legal services should be delivered efficiently and in a user-friendly way. If lawyers refuse to use the best software and services available to them, they could be in violation of the rules.The accelerating pace of innovation, however, necessitates that lawyers - particularly those working in-house - stay vigilant while leveraging these technologies for client services and internal transactions.Regardless of what Law Society and State Bar rules say, it’s generally uncontested that innovative lawyers will outperform lawyers who fight positive change.ChatGPT and Google BardAI tools like ChatGPT and Google Bard, which initially found usage in creating music, narratives, and greeting cards, are now being harnessed by law firms for tasks like drafting documents, conducting legal research, and rewriting demand letters. These tools generate results based on a wealth of historical data, legal precedents, and past practices.While ChatGPT can be a beneficial aide for generating a basic structure for legal arguments or documentation, it doesn’t replace lawyers.The real value of a lawyer shines through their ability to craft unique arguments, sense the mood of the judge, and make accurate risk assessments for their clients. An AI tool that solely depends on past data would be inadequate at performing these critical roles.The reliance on historical data could cause these AI tools to inadvertently mirror human biases, ideologies, and moral judgments. Law is constantly evolving, and ChatGPT is still using data from September 2021.
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About Alistair Vigier
Alistair Vigier is the CEO of ClearwayLaw, a website that allows the public to connect with and leave ratings for every lawyer in Canada, Germany, and the UK.