Roberts struck an ambivalent tone in his 13-page report. He said
AI had potential to increase access to justice for indigent
litigants, revolutionize legal research and assist courts in
resolving cases more quickly and cheaply while also pointing to
privacy concerns and the current technology's inability to
replicate human discretion.
"I predict that human judges will be around for a while,"
Roberts wrote. "But with equal confidence I predict that
judicial work - particularly at the trial level - will be
significantly affected by AI."
The chief justice's commentary is his most significant
discussion to date of the influence of AI on the law, and
coincides with a number of lower courts contending with how best
to adapt to a new technology capable of passing the bar exam but
also prone to generating fictitious content, known as
"hallucinations."
Roberts emphasized that "any use of AI requires caution and
humility." He mentioned an instance where AI hallucinations had
led lawyers to cite non-existent cases in court papers, which
the chief justice said is "always a bad idea." Roberts did not
elaborate beyond saying the phenomenon "made headlines this
year."
Last week, for instance, Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's former
fixer and lawyer, said in court papers unsealed last week that
he mistakenly gave his attorney fake case citations generated by
an AI program that made their way into an official court filing.
Other instances of lawyers including AI-hallucinated cases in
legal briefs have also been documented.
A federal appeals court in New Orleans last month drew headlines
by unveiling what appeared to be the first proposed rule by any
of the 13 U.S. appeals courts aimed at regulating the use of
generative AI tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT by lawyers appearing
before it.
The proposed rule by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals would
require lawyers to certify that they either did not rely on
artificial intelligence programs to draft briefs or that humans
reviewed the accuracy of any text generated by AI in their court
filings.
(Reporting by John Kruzel with additional reporting by Nate
Raymond in Boston; editing by Grant McCool)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|