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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][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] This is a really bad thing to do with long documents because often the AI hallucinates if it can’t find anything about Larlo or Larla. I have found when I ask the AI these kinds of questions I MUST go back and verify it myself. At work, Adobe has its own AI tool in acrobat that is better for these kinds of questions.[/quote] This. I’m an attorney and have played around with it a bit to learn more about documents and its accuracy is, generously, poor. We are being directed to figure out how to incorporate it more at work and it is a challenge. [/quote]
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