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In his annual report, Chief Justice John Roberts on Sunday addressed the future of artificial intelligence in the judiciary. Roberts predicted that “human judges will be around for a while,” but he also suggested that “judicial work—particularly at the trial level—will be significantly affected by AI,” and he assured members of the public that committees within the federal judiciary would consider the use of AI in litigation in the federal courts.
Instead, Roberts focused on artificial intelligence, which in 2023 made news in the legal world when one AI tool, ChatGPT, passed several law school exams. But the use of AI tools for legal research can also be fraught with peril, as Michael Cohen, who once served as an attorney to former President Donald Trump, discovered when he relied on an AI tool to provide his criminal defense lawyer with citations to cases that turned out to be fake.
AI, Roberts wrote, “obviously has great potential to dramatically increase access to key information for lawyers and non-lawyers alike.” And AI could be particularly useful, he posited, in ensuring broader access to justice. But, he cautioned, “any use of AI requires caution and humility” because of the risk of “invading privacy interests and dehumanizing the law.”
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