The free chatbot from OpenAI performed better than predicted, however, earning passing scores on evidence and torts. The academics behind the experiment expect it will pass the attorney licensing test someday.
Jake Heller, chief executive officer of legal tech company CaseText, said law schools should encourage students to use ChatGPT and similar tools as a starting point for documents and a way to generate ideas. “We’re at a very interesting inflection point,” Perlman said. “It would not surprise me if professionals of the future will be expected to make queries to chatbots and other tools to at least get an initial draft of a document.”
“This technology should strike fear in all academics,” he wrote, noting that ChatGPT produces original text that cannot be identified by existing plagiarism detection software.
Hope that technology kicks google's ass. Google sat aside and did nothing using the old algorithm for ages. Time to pay for that relaxing.
Hopefully ChatGPT will soon reduce the need for human lawyers, helping ending the intellectual dictature of a law, which is no justice.