Tuesday, June 25, 2024

It may be simpler to let AI learn the lawyering game.

https://www.lawnext.com/2024/06/new-legal-ethics-opinion-cautions-lawyers-you-must-be-proficient-in-the-use-of-generative-ai.html

New Legal Ethics Opinion Cautions Lawyers: You ‘Must Be Proficient’ In the Use of Generative AI

A new legal ethics opinion on the use of generative AI in law practice makes one point very clear: lawyers are required to maintain competence across all technological means relevant to their practices, and that includes the use of generative AI.

The opinion, jointly issued by the Pennsylvania Bar Association and Philadelphia Bar Association, was issued to educate attorneys on the benefits and pitfalls of using generative AI and to provide ethical guidelines.

While the opinion is focused on AI, it repeatedly emphasizes that a lawyer’s ethical obligations surrounding this emerging form of technology are no different than those for any form of technology.





What if the next LLM is built on AI hallucinations?

https://dailynous.com/2024/06/24/ai-generated-content-and-academic-journals/

AI Generated Content and Academic Journals

What are good policy options for academic journals regarding the detection of AI generated content and publication decisions?

As a group of associate editors of Dialectica note below, there are several issues involved, including the uncertain performance of AI detection tools and the risk that material checked by such tools is used for the further training of AIs.





For my ‘wall of heroes.’

https://english.elpais.com/technology/2024-06-24/alejandro-caceres-the-hacker-who-took-down-north-koreas-internet-from-his-home-my-attack-was-a-response-to-their-attempt-to-spy-on-me.html

Alejandro Cáceres, the hacker who took down North Korea’s internet from his home: ‘My attack was a response to their attempt to spy on me’



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