And they don’t see this as an
indication that their profession is doomed?
https://www.bespacific.com/law-professors-prefer-ai-over-peer-answers/
Law
Professors Prefer AI Over Peer Answers
Reuters:
“Law professors overwhelmingly preferred answers drafted by AI
over ones written by fellow professors, a new
Stanford Law School study found,
suggesting that the technology is capable of legal reasoning and that
law students may benefit from AI tutoring. Professors from 14
U.S. law schools developed a list of 40 questions representative of
those first-year contracts students ask during faculty office hours.
The professors wrote answers to the questions, and researchers had
two AI platforms — Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro and NotebookLM —
also answer them. The same professors blindly judged the short
answers head-to-head and chose the AI-generated ones as most
beneficial to students 75% of the time. The AI platforms performed
just as well as the professor rated most highly in the study. “We
were frankly surprised by the magnitude of the results,” lead
researcher and Stanford law professor Julian Nyarko said in
an article
on Stanford’s website about
the study. “These weren’t just simple questions with obvious
answers.” The study comes as law schools and the legal profession
grapple with how to incorporate rapidly evolving AI into teaching and
law practice. Earlier studies have found that AI can pass
the bar exam, earn
A+ law school grades,
and effectively
grade law school exams …”
Can you think
of any other businesses that are equally vulnerable to an AI
takeover?
https://www.forbes.com/sites/annatong/2026/06/02/thrive-holdings-to-bet-1-billion-on-ai-powered-accounting-roll-up/
Thrive
Holdings To Bet $1 Billion On AI-Powered Accounting Roll-Up
In
Thrive Holdings’ live-fire testing ground, self-improving AI models
are achieving up to 98% data-entry accuracy, offering a blueprint for
the automation of professional services.
Is this the
only field where the practitioners have an opinion?
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/02/science/ai-mathematics-leiden-declaration.html?unlocked_article_code=1.nFA.v6n1.vQ52ZDoCvFBV&smid=url-share
As
A.I. Makes Strides in Mathematics, Mathematicians Urge Caution
Recently there
are signs that some branches of higher mathematics, among the most
rarefied realms of human achievement, are vulnerable to a shake-up by
artificial intelligence. Mathematicians, in turn, have been thinking
about how to respond.
On
Tuesday, a group of 16 mathematicians, in consultation with
colleagues and math organizations worldwide, published the Leiden
Declaration on Artificial Intelligence and Mathematics.
It aims to “frame the conversation about future directions,”
said Dame Ursula Martin, one of the authors, and a mathematician and
computer scientist at Oxford.
These are not
the droids you are looking for…
https://www.rawstory.com/trump-presidential-records-act-2676990330/
Trump's
own library says his DMs don't exist. A federal court disagrees.
The newly
operational Trump Presidential Library claims it cannot turn up a
single Twitter direct message sent by Donald Trump during his first
term in office — a striking claim given that court records confirm
such messages exist.
In response to
a Freedom of Information Act request filed by The Washington Post at
12:01 a.m. on January 20, 2025 — exactly five years after the end
of Trump's first term — the library stated it had been "unable
to locate any records" related to any direct message sent from
Trump's @realDonaldTrump or @POTUS accounts. The request covered the
entirety of his first administration, during which Trump sent more
than 25,000 public tweets.
The no-records
response stands in direct contradiction to evidence produced in
federal court, the newspaper reported. During special counsel Jack
Smith's investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, Twitter
complied with a warrant and handed over at least 32 direct messages
sent to or from the @realDonaldTrump account between October 2020 and
January 2021. A Twitter attorney confirmed to the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia that "there are confidential
communications" in the account.
Altering
reality for fun and profit?
https://www.bespacific.com/won-the-civil-war-now-banning-books-about-why-civil-war-was-fought/
The
Side That Won the Civil War is Now Banning Books About Why the Civil
War Was Fought
LitHub
– Tom
Zoellner on the Antebellum Precedent of Trump-Era Censorship:
“In the days before the Civil War, the South worked hard to censor
any literature that cast slavery in a negative light. Officials in
Charleston, S.C. went through mailbags for abolitionist newspapers.
Legislatures passed laws banning any publication that may show “a
tendency to make our slaves discontented.” In Maryland, the Rev.
Jacob Gruber was prosecuted for daring to preach a sermon that hinted
that slavery might be sinful. Anyone found with a copy of the
explosive novel Uncle
Tom’s Cabin was
subject to arrest. I wrote about this censorious mania to preserve
the fiction of “happy and contented slaves” in a recent book
about the important role played by enslaved people in achieving their
own freedom. It was published in September under the title The
Road Was Full of Thorns.
I could not have dreamed that my book itself would be censored—by
the U.S. Government, the side that supposedly won the Civil War.
Censorship often works like this—indirectly, requiring no specified
demands but rather a vague climate of intimidation that encourages
“an abundance of caution” when making decisions about what voices
should be heard.
A little background. In May of 2025, a
few months into Donald Trump’s second term, Interior Secretary Doug
Burgum issued Order 3431 entitled “Restoring Truth and Sanity to
American History.” It directed the superintendents of national
parks and monuments to “review property for inappropriate content”
and scrub their facilities of “any signs or other information that
are negative about either past or living Americans.” The order to
whitewash America’s historic sites of anything less than rosy about
the nation’s past has led to some predictable embarrassments.
Visitors to Independence Hall in Philadelphia won’t learn much
about the enslaved people owned by the founding fathers. The
internment camp at Manzanar won’t have anything “negative”
about the detention of 120,000 Japanese Americans in World War II.
Fort Moultrie National Monument no longer has information
related to rising sea levels that threaten Charleston Harbor.
The order extends to books and materials on sale at the gift stores.
Books related to Malcolm X and other Black leaders have been
reportedly removed. My own book details the consequential events at
a place called Fort Monroe in Virginia that led directly to Lincoln’s
Emancipation Proclamation and the end of American slavery. Yet it is
not for sale in the bookstore of the Fort Monroe National Monument.
Because the book tells a hopeful story about how enslaved people ran
toward the American flag during the Civil War, sought their own
freedom and helped tip the military balance against the Confederacy,
I would have thought it would have been in alignment with even the
narrowest conservative definition of patriotic content. But the
cover depicts seven members of the U.S. Colored Troops standing at
attention. The jacket copy makes it clear that it is about slavery.
It is not hard to imagine it setting off minor alarms on the part of
the National Park Service or Eastern National, the concessionaire
with the exclusive contract to supply the bookstore…
A
strong clue to what happened might be found in a letter that went out
to regional Park Service directors on November 25, 2025 asking for a
review of “all retail items available for purchase in outlets
operated by park cooperating associations and concessioners” to
make sure they were in accord with the administration’s ideological
goals.
“Items identified as non-compliant with this order must be removed
from sale immediately,” said the memo, signed by comptroller
Jessica Bowron. A leaked database of inspections shows that
officials at Yosemite National Park, Organ Pipe Cactus National
Monument, and the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail, among
other places, had singled out books in the bookstore for review. At
the latter place, an anonymous official wrote that “out of an
abundance of caution,” books such as The
1619 Project,
which details the origins of American slavery, would be targeted for
removal. This was their decision, not that of the Interior
Department…”