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Reply to "How much do you use ai to write or as a work tool?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Never. I hate it, and in my field - law - it notoriously hallucinates. I love to write, am an excellent writer, and write quickly. I love language and sentence composition, so why would I have something do it for me, especially if it will do a poor job. Additionally, for advice to a client, a fair amount of my work is tone and nuance. I am not trusting that to an AI. And then too, sometimes I am not entirely sure of what my view of an issue will be until I write it out. The writing process helps me clarify and retain the information. And since my practice is built on expertise, I need to have that expertise at hand when I walk into a meeting and am asked unexpected questions. Can't do that if I rely on AI.[/quote] On the other hand, as a client, it's great. I'm a trustee for a relative. A question came up and I fed the trust agreement into chatGPT so I could ask it questions before I met with an actual lawyer. It was terrific as way for me to search and understand that document without knowing the terminology. So I was way better prepared to meet with the lawyer and I was better able to understand the conversation. It's not like I asked it for legal advice. But I did ask it things like "what does the trust agreement say happens if Larla dies before Larlo?" and "what does the trust agreement say about if Larla marries and has a stepchild?" and it was great at directing me to the relevant sections. [/quote] PP you're quoting. Fair, although I would worry about confidentiality. At my workplace we are not allowed to feed internal agency documents into AI because of confidentiality and privacy issues. But if you don't mind that, then whatever. I of course glance at AI search results for non-work stuff, like most people. Including Dr. Google. :) But always with the mindset that it could be wrong so if I truly need to know, I need to read the real results, ask a real doctor, etc. [/quote]
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