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Category: Practice Management, Case Law, Computer Skills, Discovery, Ethics, General Practice, ICLEF ONLINE Seminars, International Law, Legal Writing, Miscellaneous, Practice Skills, Technology for Lawyers (show less)
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OVERVIEWYou’ve seen, heard, and read the buzz around artificial intelligence. If you’re wondering how this applies to your practice (both in maintaining an office and in case management), Sam Hodge, Jr. has consolidated multiple sources into a comprehensive presentation that will be useful in your understanding and application of AI to your practice.
Joining Sam will be Magistrate Judge Drew Bloch from Hamilton Superior Court and Seth R. Wilson, from Adler Attorneys in Noblesville.
Be aware...of the efficiencies and time-saving abilities that AI-based services afford. Sam will use a “hands-on approach” that will demonstrate 12 services that provide:
-Text writing
-Case law research in a natural language format
-Contact drafting, negotiating, and review
-Document creation, such as the writing of a brief or complaint
-Predictive outcomes based on facts, venue, opponent, and judge!
-Grammar, text generation, and sentence editing
-Sentence-based parallel investigations
-Document translation that can identify common clauses, provisions, and data points
-Risk assessment tools for sentencing and bail decisions
Be afraid... of hallucinations, deep fakes, outright fraud, and multiple unintended consequences.
Sam further investigates the limitations of the technology, security concerns, and liability issues that are still being “worked out.”
Finally, as with any new avenue of exploration, novel ethical issues and questions of law arise. Several have been identified, and some have even been addressed! Ethical and legal hurdles: Competence, confidentiality, copyright issues, tort & contract liabilityAGENDA (3 CLE / .5 Ethics)Introduction
Definitions
-artificial intelligence, machine learning, algorithm, chatbot
History of Artificial Intelligence in the legal profession
Generative AI (ChatGPT)
OpenAI
What is ChatGPT and GPT-4 and how do they work?
Text Generation and its uses
Limitations and Hallucinations
Demonstration of how to set up an account.
Plugins
Uses in the Legal Profession
Litigation
Current lack of use
Skepticism about system’s accuracy and security
Changes in the business model of law firms
Sample law plugins and how they work
Specific Applications in the Legal Profession
Predictive Coding
Legal Research
Contract drafting and analysis
Court Use
Do These Systems Have a Built-In Bias?
Bias decision making
Concerns about AI and society
Disadvantages and Risks of Artificial Intelligence
Disclosure of confidential information
Misuse of data
Inaccurate results
External risks
Loss of jobs
Ethical Issues
Code of Professional Responsibility Application to AI
-competence, communication, confidentiality, and supervision
Is AI advice the unauthorized practice of law?
Legal Issues- Liability, Copyright Violations and Confidentiality
Copyright
- Who owns the output?
- Is it a derivative work?
- Fair Use
- User Agreement
Confidentiality
- How to stop ChatGPT from saving chats
- Data breaches
- Regulations on technology
Liability
- Who is responsible for a mistake?
- Tort liability
- Contract liability
Vendor indemnification clauses
Adjourn
To receive CLE credit for an ICLEF On-Demand or a LIVE WEBCAST seminar, you must watch the program in its entirety. ICLEF is unable to award partial CLE credit for viewing ICLEF On-Demand or LIVE WEBCAST seminars. You will have 30 days from the date-of-purchase to complete your ICLEF distance learning seminar. If you are unable to complete the LIVE WEBCAST seminar on the scheduled date of the seminar, ICLEF will place a copy of the ON DEMAND version of the program in your ICLEF Online Account three (3) to five (5) business days after the LIVE WEBCAST concludes. Please call or email ICLEF should you have further questions (317) 637-9102 or iclef@iclef.org