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Court Rejects Use of ChatGPT-4 as a ‘Cross-Check’ in Plaintiff Attorneys’ Fees and Costs Petition

By Kevin J. Quilty on April 8, 2024
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Given ChatGPT’s now-infamous capacity to generate its own legal opinions, complete with official-looking, but entirely confabulated, citations and quotations, it is not surprising that courts remain skeptical of its use in judicial proceedings. And as the lawyers in J.G. v. New York City Dep’t of Educ. recently discovered, practitioners should not be surprised by courts’ outright rejection of its use—especially when the lawyers do not explain what inputs were provided to the chatbot.

Continue reading the full GT Alert.

Photo of Kevin J. Quilty Kevin J. Quilty

Kevin J. Quilty is a commercial litigator who focuses his practice on complex business disputes and class action defense work. He concentrates in the areas of business fraud, consumer class actions, data privacy law, and contractual disputes. Kevin practices in both state and…

Kevin J. Quilty is a commercial litigator who focuses his practice on complex business disputes and class action defense work. He concentrates in the areas of business fraud, consumer class actions, data privacy law, and contractual disputes. Kevin practices in both state and federal courts, as well as in domestic and international arbitration.

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  • Posted in:
    Corporate & Commercial
  • Blog:
    Emerging Technology Views
  • Organization:
    Greenberg Traurig, LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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