Artificial Intelligence
-
@EdH yeah that could definitely be tricky. I find search engines doing that in general and it’s very frustrating. Especially if it finds false or speculative information, or opinions even, but it presents them as results all the same. There’s just so much junk data out there…. You have to wade thought an ocean of bs just to get a little nugget of truth or fact.
-
@goosehd yes, in a way, it’s just telling you what you want to hear. Lol
-
@goosehd I think I'm not making myself clear enough, maybe.
By "what you want" I mean what task you want it to do. So "summarise this case" or "draft me a couple of paragraphs summarising [law bit]". I personally wouldn't ask it for "give me cases that support argument X" at this stage. Doing so has landed lawyers in hot water because the AI models are not search engines and it leads to some models hallucinating cases that don't exist. (But I know that there are models under development in law that would be able to answer that query.) At the end of the day, one key piece of advice when using these models is to check everything before anything goes out.
Generally, yeah, I do find law to be a bit analogous to science:
research = research your client's facts and the relevant law
hypothesis = predict the outcome by applying the law to your client's factual matrix
experiment = take the case to court and see what happensI wouldn't say that a good lawyer is only concerned with getting "exactly what they are looking for" though. It may appear that way to the outside world, but a good lawyer should be advising their client honestly on the legal strengths and weaknesses of their position. Those conversations are privileged, of course, so don't get seen by the outside world. And a client in a legally weak position may have other options open to them, like settling the case early (if a dispute) or using other means to improve their bargaining position. I tell my clients things they don't want to hear all the time, but that very rarely means they have no options or agency in the situation at all.
-
this would be equivalent to self driving cars. who's liable?
- the self driving AI would not be legally liable
- the person that owns the car could be absolved of liabilities because he/she would technically not be in control
not taking into account, causation and chain of effect.
-
@EdH Thank you for your detailed response!!
Further question: You typically build an argument based upon existing laws and precedents and I can see you using AI to strengthen your argument, but could you also use it as a tool to poke holes in your argument and give you perspectives that you weren't anticipating.
I could see that as quite useful to prepare you and your client in any case that you were examining and to save you time and the client's money in those arguments.
-
New Open AI x Figure demo.
They've also confirmed that no parts of the videos are edited/sped up, and that all responses are generated in real time, with no pre-programming.
What gets me though, is the human-like vocal quirks! The uhms, and ahhs really anthropomorphise the machine in my mind...
-
My wife just received the latest upgrade of her artificial unintelligence at the salon
-
@goosehd said in Artificial Intelligence:
could you also use it as a tool to poke holes in your argument and give you perspectives that you weren't anticipating
I have heard that an LLM called HarveyAI can do something like this. I've registered my interest in that product, but I doubt I'll hear back. It seems from their marketing that they want their customer base to be reserved for the very upper-echelons of our industry. I doubt they'd be interested in firms outside London.
-
@T4920 Ok, that's really cool, but also kind of freaking me out.
It's the drudgery of the tasks it was set, I think. I'm having flashbacks to the existential ennui experienced by the butter passing robot in Rick and Morty.
-
the new Figure Demo literally made me lose some Muesli as my jaw dropped watching it this morning @T4920
How it pushed the trash container further in the sense of „uh wait, this wasn’t far enough, he‘ll have a hard time reaching it“
-
The Figure One demo is very impressive, but I’d be interested to see how it copes with a less controlled/sanitised environment. The Figure videos are noticeably different compared to the Boston Dynamics videos (for example). The Boston Dynamics robotics demos are great because they show the robots failing and being interfered with by the outside world (I vaguely remember a video showing their Atlas robot being beaten with a hockey stick while it tried to pick up a box).
-
-
@EdH ROFL OMG that had me rolling. NAILED IT
-
@EdH based… Trump?! What happened here?
-
@pechelman well they’ll be very bored waiting!
-
The new wave of AI music generation tools are quietly concerning, but endlessly entertaining to mess around with.
Two simple prompts, and around 15 seconds later, this is what it came out with...
-
@sabergirl I know right! In the same way that some CGI sits in the realm of the 'uncanny valley', the terms of phrase generated as lyrics by this programme leave me feeling equally unsettled...
That said, this is such an early iteration this phenomenon. I have no doubt it'll be almost indistinguishable from 'real music' in the not too distant future!