| ▲ | kstrauser 3 hours ago | |
I'm about as pro-AI as anyone here. I say this with love: anyone using general-purpose, consumer-grade AI for healthcare, law, or taxes is mad. Best wishes to your son, bless his heart, but please have him consult a qualified lawyer before showing up to court with model-drafted legal documents. Among other things, those chats are not privileged information[0] and the banks could subpoena chat transcripts to see what else he might have told them. [0]https://natlawreview.com/article/new-york-court-rules-ai-doc... | ||
| ▲ | gscott 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
He has had multiple hearings and the Judge has reviewed everything. The court clerk reads every submission and before the clerk puts it in the system they have a in-house lawyer review each document. This is pretty far along. The trial is scheduled for October of this year. The bank has a lawyer, they were hoping for a default judgement because who can afford to fight the bank. The choice is fight it yourself or declare bankruptcy. As you already know, AI companies trained on every single document they can find. Those include legal documents. The legal system is structured where you have Federal Laws, State Laws, Federal & State Regulations and Court Precedent. Because of this structure it is not difficult for a LLM to figure out. | ||
| ▲ | bombcar 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
The only way to "win" as a small is to be pro se and be extremely diligent in understanding what is happening. Then, it costs you nothing but time. | ||