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Sam
@very-simple.com
new yorker | feminist | lawyer | photography dilettante
347 followers292 following4.9k posts
Svery-simple.com

I went to a legal AI seminar last week and it was genuinely interesting as to what they demo’d (summarizing relevant contract terms, doing ‘holistic’ blacklines of counterparty agreements against in-house forms), but of course the big question is always how much do you trust it is correct? I went to a legal AI seminar last week and it was genuinely interesting as to what they demo’d (summarizing relevant contract terms, doing ‘holistic’ blacklines of counterparty agreements against in-house forms), but of course the big question is always how much do you trust it is correct?

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LHlindaholmes.bsky.social

Right. You can’t! If I were in charge, it would be 100 percent malpractice if you leaned on something like that and the client suffered any adverse consequences. It’s, legally speaking, not just negligent but reckless: ignoring a known risk.

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Sam
@very-simple.com
new yorker | feminist | lawyer | photography dilettante
347 followers292 following4.9k posts