Latest from AI Law - Page 21

The author of Human Rights, Robot Wrongs on why AI isn’t an all-or-nothing equation, separating hype from genuine dangers, and discovering that ChatGPT says she doesn’t exist Susie Alegre is an international human rights lawyer and author, originally from the Isle of Man, whose focus in recent years has been on technology and its impact on

Reuters New York law firm Sullivan & Cromwell said on Thursday that it has formed a new artificial intelligence practice, as large firms compete to handle clients’ growing AI-related legal needs. The 800-lawyer firm said the group would be headed by leaders of its intellectual property and finance practices in Silicon Valley, New York and

A £2.4 million initiative has been launched to help organisations develop solutions for pressing questions around the responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI). Researchers will address a range of AI-related challenges in industry, public organisations and the third sector through a series of fellowships announced today by the University of Edinburgh. The Fellows, appointed from

CHICAGO – Reed Smith today welcomed its first director of applied artificial intelligence (AI), Richard Robbins. In this role, Robbins will lead the design and development of generative AI, predictive AI, data science and other disciplines for the delivery of Reed Smith’s legal and business services. He will lead a team of AI engineers and

1st Report – Large language models and generative AI Inquiry Large language models Get File  Published 2 February 2024  HL Paper 54  Report Response to this report Government response to the Committee’s report ‘Large language models and generative AI’ Get File  Published 2 May 2024  Government Response download at  https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/170/communications-and-digital-committee/publications/ Commentary Publishers Association Blasts the UK

I’m officially a fan of Scott Greenfield. – nice to see some human brains actually at work !   When I was asked to beta test its AI research bot, I informed a major legal research provider that it worse than sucked. It was dangerous. Not only did it hallucinate, which could be ascertained with

AI is early in its lifecycle, but the technology is already a powerful resource for legal professionals. ChatGPT and related AI tools can write, edit, and research—three tasks that weigh heavily on the daily agendas for paralegals and legal assistants. If ChatGPT can handle those duties, law firm administrators will likely ask their support team