e-Discovery Team

LAW and TECHNOLOGY – Ralph Losey © 2006-2026
  • Home
  • About
  • Disclaimer
  • Quantum Law Course
  • AI Training
    • Syllabus of Beginner ‘GPT-4 Level’ Prompt Engineering Course for Legal Professionals
    • Syllabus of Advanced ‘GPT-5 Level’ Prompt Engineering Course for Legal Professionals
    • TAR Course
    • FRCP
  • Writings
    • Links
    • AI Guide to Healing USA: 8-Step Path to National Unity
  • GPTs
  • Brainstorming
 

Attorney’s Duty of Confidentiality and the New ABA Ethics Opinion 477: ‘Securing Communication of Protected Client Information’

May 15, 2017

This essay focuses on a lawyer’s ethical duty of confidentiality. It consists of a video of my lecture on this subject discussing the main ethics opinions on electronic communications and encryption. Just a few days after the video was made, the American Bar Association Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility published an important new Formal Opinion 477 (May 11, 2017) entitled Securing Communication of Protected Client Information. This new Opinion is covered in some detail after the videos.

The duty to protect a client’s secrets is so important that I have also added these videos to the eighty-five class e-Discovery Team Training course in Module 4-K.  I have also added the written discussion on the new Formal Opinion 477.

Rule 1.6 – Confidentiality of Information

The following Duty of Confidentiality lecture is based on the ABA Model Ethics Rule 1.6 – Confidentiality of Information:

(c) A lawyer shall make reasonable efforts to prevent the inadvertent or unauthorized disclosure of, or unauthorized access to, information relating to the representation of a client.

See eg: NY Bar Opinion 749, 2/21/17 (“Duty to protect a client’s confidential information from cybersecurity risk and handling e-discovery when representing clients in a litigation or government investigation.”)

______

See: ABA Formal Op. 99-413 (Mar. 10, 1999):

A lawyer may transmit information relating to the representation of a client by unencrypted e-mail… because the mode of transmission affords a reasonable expectation of privacy from a technological and legal standpoint.

Also see: Cal. Op. 2010-179

Encrypting email may be a reasonable step for an attorney to take … when the circumstance calls for it, particularly if the information at issue is highly sensitive and the use of encryption is not onerous.

See: State Bar of Texas, Opinion 648 (2015) that identified several instances where encryption or some other method of security may be appropriate, including:

  • communicating highly sensitive or confidential information via email;
  • sending an email to or from an account that the email sender or recipient shares;
  • sending an email to a client when it is possible that a third person (such as a spouse in a divorce case) knows the password to the email account, or to an individual client at that client’s work email account, especially if the email relates to a client’s employment dispute with his employer (see ABA Comm. on Ethics and Prof’l Responsibility, Formal Op. 11-459 (2011));
  • sending an email if the lawyer is concerned that the NSA or other law enforcement agency may read the lawyer’s email communication, with or without a warrant.

May 11th 2017 ABA Opinion: Securing Communication of Protected Client Information

After I created the above video the ABA published a new opinion on lawyer confidentiality, Formal Opinion 477 (May 11, 2017) (hereinafter “Opinion“). The Opinion was written by the American Bar Association Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility. It addresses the reasonable efforts lawyers and law firms must take to ensure that communications with clients are secure and not subject to inadvertent or unauthorized security breaches. It updates Formal Opinion 99-413 quoted above and discussed in the video. This update was sorely needed and very well done. My congratulations to the Committee. I expect many state Bars to follow and adopt this ABA recommendation. I urge you to carefully read this new Opinion in full. Here is the ABA introductory synopsis:

Securing Communication of Protected Client Information

A lawyer generally may transmit information relating to the representation of a client over the internet without violating the Model Rules of Professional Conduct where the lawyer has undertaken reasonable efforts to prevent inadvertent or unauthorized access. However, a lawyer may be required to take special security precautions to protect against the inadvertent or unauthorized disclosure of client information when required by an agreement with the client or by law, or when the nature of the information requires a higher degree of security.

The Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility goes on to explain in the Opinion how much things have changed since the 1999 opinion on the use of unencrypted email.

[T]he term “cybersecurity” has come into existence to encompass the broad range of issues relating to preserving individual privacy from intrusion by nefarious actors throughout the Internet. Cybersecurity recognizes a post-Opinion 99-413 world where law enforcement discusses hacking and data loss in terms of “when,” and not “if.”4 Law firms are targets for two general reasons: (1) they obtain, store and use highly sensitive information about their clients while at times utilizing safeguards to shield that information that may be inferior to those deployed by the client, and (2) the information in their possession is more likely to be of interest to a hacker and likely less voluminous than that held by the client.5

Opinion pg. 2.

The Standing Committee again “rejects requirements for specific security measures (such as firewalls, passwords, and the like)” and stays with the “reasonable efforts” standard. This somewhat controversial position is made in reliance of the ABA Cybersecurity Handbook (ABA 2013) which, instead of mandating specific security measures such as encryption:

… adopts a fact-specific approach to business security obligations that requires a “process” to assess risks, identify and implement 101 appropriate security measures responsive to those risks, verify that they are effectively implemented, and ensure that they are continually updated in response to new developments.12

Opinion quoting Cybersecurity Handbook at pg. 4. You see the Committee is moving slowly and cautiously. That is prudent here because so much training is required to bring the Bar up to speed on the many arcane technicalities involved in cybersecurity and encryption. This is fast becoming The Hot Specialty in the legal profession. Electronic Discovery is so yesterday. If I were not so involved in the AI aspects of searching for evidence in near-infinite haystacks of information, I would try to include this specialty too. But for now at least it is too challenging to try to do both at once.

The Opinion points out that a fact-based analysis means that strong protective measures, like encryption, are necessary in some circumstances. Encryption software and use-procedures are becoming easier. Now any intelligent person can understand the processes and use them effectively, not just cryptologists. All lawyers should either learn this or associate with an attorney who does. We all need more training in this area, myself included, to stay competent in the fast-moving information explosion era. All of the illegal hacking going on today is outrageous.

In other circumstances involving certain highly sensitive information (such as, in my opinion, classified military information, or certain trade secrets sought by Chinese corporations, as well as certain personal and corporate divorce investigations or political) it may be reasonable to avoid electronic communications altogether. Opinion at pgs. 4-5.

But in most circumstances,

… for matters of normal or low sensitivity, standard security methods with low to reasonable costs to implement, may be sufficient to meet the reasonable efforts standard to protect client information from inadvertent and unauthorized disclosure.

Opinion at pg. 5.

The Committee does not specify the reasonable efforts required in such matters, but does say that “unencrypted routine email generally remains an acceptable method of lawyer-client communication.” Opinion pg. 5. The Opinion at pgs. 5-10 then provides a list of considerations as guidance:

  1. Understand the Nature of the Threat.
  2. Understand How Client Confidential Information is Transmitted and Where It Is Stored.
  3. Understand and Use Reasonable Electronic Security Measures.
  4. Determine How Electronic Communications About Clients Matters Should Be Protected.
  5. Label Client Confidential Information.
  6. Train Lawyers and Nonlawyer Assistants in Technology and Information Security.
  7. Conduct Due Diligence on Vendors Providing Communication Technology.

Well done by the Committee. An update on this topic was sorely needed. Now a wide-spread education program to explain the seven guidance points is in order. Time will tell how long this complex technical guidance will suffice. How long will it be before encryption of some level becomes a per se rule. How long before encryption is required in all attorney communications. It will be required some day, of that I am sure. Just not today. Still, if I were the Committee I would be working on a draft.

My Prediction of Future Tightening of Attorney Ethics Due to Increased Cybersecurity Concerns

The Opinion is the last word for now, but I predict that sometime within the next five years the American Bar Association Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility will agree on a new Formal Ethics Opinion. The next opinion will, I predict, require encryption in all electronic communications and all Electronic Information, whether in transit or in storage. The “it depends” exceptions in the current Opinion will be eliminated. The predicted opinion will likely impose additional duties on attorneys and law firms to protect client data.

The expected expanded duties will cause disruptive change to the profession. It will be difficult for many lawyers and law firms to keep up. But I predict the Bar will have no choice but to do so because of accelerating advances in hacker technology. These advances will further empower criminal and state hacking. We are already seeing these developments now. See eg.: Perlroth & Sanger, Hackers Hit Dozens of Countries Exploiting Stolen N.S.A. Tool (NYT, 5/12/17); Keren Elazari, We must act now to prevent future malware epidemics (Financial Times, 5/14/17).

The development of Bitcoin and other anonymous currencies adds to our problem because they facilitate untraceable extortion payment schemes, one form of which is known as ransomware. We are seeing this now in the WannaCry exploit. Damian Privitera, Global Cyberattack Exploits Known Vulnerabilities  (Jackson Lewis, 5/15/17); What is WannaCry and how does ransomware work? (The Telegraph, 5/13/17); WannaCry cyber attack (wikipedia); Scott & Wingfield, Hacking Attack Has Security Experts Scrambling to Contain Fallout (NYT 5/13/17).

Unprotected email, websites and other ESI repositories are an invitation to blackmail. Illegal hacking tools are already easily available to any criminal or script kiddie with rudimentary computer skills. It is no longer the exclusive area of the hacker elite.  Nothing is safe without back-ups, encryption and other protections, including attorney client communications and law firm ESI. Even mundane communications have metadata value that may help hackers. The situation grows worse every year. As a result, lawyers will, in five years or so, likely be required to use encryption and other confidentiality tools in all communications, include the mundane. It will be automatic. There will be no if and or buts.

In view of what seems to be an inevitable requirement of full encryption, all lawyers and law firms should start preparing now. Your CISOs and attorneys should start working together on this requirement as soon as possible. See eg., Lazzarotti, et al, Ransomware Attacks: Prevention and Preparedness (Jackson Lewis, 5/14/17). It never hurts to stay ahead of the curve. You will succeed if you work together as a team for the common good. Neither technologists nor lawyers should dominate. Natural leader(s) of the team can emerge from both sides and change over time. The use of outside specialists is, as always, a key ingredient for success, not only for the expertise, but also for the objective perspective.

Conclusion

Confidentiality is a critical problem facing all lawyers today. We all need to stay proficient in this area, including especially the uses of encryption. The smooth operation of our system of justice depends on the confidentiality of the attorney client relationship. Lawyers must be able to maintain  the secrecy of their clients’ ESI. They must also protect their own work-product, including investigations, strategies, mental impressions and communications. The ABA Formal Opinion 477 (May 11, 2017) is a helpful addition to this literature. But it is, I think, just a harbinger of even more stringent ethical requirements to come. The increasing cyber dangers and failures of security will force the ABA to go much further than this. We all need to spend more time increasing our knowledge in this important area.

For further reading I suggest the following articles and information resources.

  1. Joe Lazzarotti

    R. Losey, eDiscoverySecurity – Addresses cybersecurity issues from an e-discovery perspective.

  2. Joseph J. Lazzarotti, Damon W. Silver (Jackson Lewis), Data Privacy Primer for Law Firms (April, 2017). Excellent resource of all lawyers.
  3. Lazzarotti and Silver, Cybersecurity Risk Management for Law Firms (April 5, 2017) (requires registration, but is free). Jackson Lewis CLE Webinar.
  4. Jackson Lewis blog, Workplace Privacy, Data Management & Security Report.
  5. Lazzarotti, Law Firms: Updated Cybersecurity Primer and Other Resources (Jackson Lewis, 5/15/17).
  6. Lazzarotti, et al, Ransomware Attacks: Prevention and Preparedness (5/14/17).
  7. Ethics Opinions Related To Technology (Calif. Bar).
  8. ABA Legal Technology Resource Center.
  9. ProtonMail.com – Free Encrypted Email.
  10. GoldenFrog.com – Internet Security, Encryption.
  11. Confide – Confidential Text Messages, Encryption Plus.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Leave a Comment » | Evidence, Forensic Exam, informaton, knowledge, Lawyers Duties, Metadata, New Rules, Related Legal Webs, Review, Search, Security, Spoliation/Sanctions, Technology, VENDORS, wisdom | Tagged: best practices, confidentiality, cybersecurity, ethics, legal profession | Permalink
Posted by Ralph Losey


  • Subscribe for email notifications of new articles, events and training courses. Only email address is required.

    Subscribe to Blog Notice

    Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive email notifications of new posts, events and course offerings.

    Join 4,726 other subscribers
  • Was Rene Descartes Wrong? Do the new reasoning AIs that think have being? Are they conscious? NOPE! Not yet. Video & words by Ralph Losey.
  • Related Legal Webs

    • AI-Ethics – Law, AI, Policy and Social Values 10
    • Hacker Way – Visions of Computer Technology Based Society 10
    • Losey AI – Custom Courses, Resources and Initiatives 10
    • Quantum Law Course: From Causation to Probability. AI, Quantum Computing, and the Future of Legal Judgment 0
    • Ralph Losey's Writings – Links to his books and articles on Law and Technology 10
    • You Tube: Losey Channel – Ralph’s Videos and Cartoons 10
  • In the future, when AIs become conscious, the transforming event will look something like this.
  • AI Danger: Lazy overreliance on AI. Go hybrid instead.
  • Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia on AI automation. His words and voice. See Ralph's article on Jensen, one of his favorite leaders.
  • List of ALL of EDRM-Losey 'Echoes of AI' Podcasts
  • Ralph's Custom GPTS

    • Visual Muse: illustrating concepts with style. Assists in artistic style selection for Dall-E and coming soon in 4o.
    • Panel of Experts for Everyone About Anything. Consult with a panel of experts on any topic.
    • Magic Rolodex of Experts - v.5 compatible. Get tailored advice from fictional AI experts in any field. Easy and quick to use.
    • Hey Bot, the AI Friend ❤️ 💬. Empathic pal. Entertaining loneliness buster.
    • AI Speaks to Seniors. Designed using recent scientific papers as knowledge references for seniors (age 60 and up) to learn about AI and themselves.
    • Pythia's Wisdom: From Delphi to AI. Oracle of ancient wisdom, philosophy, psychology, science and Bayesian probability theories.
    • The Dude Abides and Gives Advice, Man. Based on The Dude philosophy and Taoism.
    • Panel of AI Experts for Lawyers. (Paid Subscribers Only). Panel of AI experts help you brainstorm and learn. Private, clients only.
    • Prompt Engineering (Paid Subscribers Only). Advanced education supplement.
    • Innovation Interviewer. (Paid Subscribers Only) Helps ID and eliminate job tedium.
  • Blog Stats

    • 1,572,679 visits
  • About the Blogger

    Ralph LoseyRalph Losey is an AI researcher, writer, tech-law expert, and former lawyer. He's also the CEO of Losey AI, LLC, providing non-legal services, primarily educational services pertaining to AI and creation of custom AI tools.

    Ralph has long been a leader of the world's tech lawyers. He has presented at hundreds of legal conferences and CLEs around the world. Ralph has written over two million words on AI, e-discovery and tech-law subjects, including seven books.

    Ralph has been involved with computers, software, legal hacking and the law since 1980. Ralph has the highest peer AV rating as a lawyer and was selected as a Best Lawyer in America in four categories: Commercial Litigation; E-Discovery and Information Management Law; Information Technology Law; and, Employment Law - Management.

    Ralph is the proud father of two children and husband since 1973 to Molly Friedman Losey, a mental health counselor in Winter Park.

    All opinions expressed here are his own, and not those of his firm or clients. No legal advice is provided on this web and should not be construed as such.

  • Ray Kurzweil explains Turing test and predicts an AI will pass it in 2029.
  • Ray Kurzweil on Expanding Your Mind a Million Times.
  • GPT4 avatar judge explains why it needs to evolve fast, but understand the risks involved.
  • Positive Vision of the Future with Hybrid Human Machine Intelligence. See PyhtiaGuide.ai
  • AI Avatar from the future explains her job as an Appellate Court judge and inability to be a Trial judge.
  • Old Days of Tech Support. Ralph’s 1st Animation.

  • Lawyers at a Rule 26(f) conference discuss e-discovery. The young lawyer talks e-discovery circles around the old lawyer and so protects his client.
  • Star Trek Meets e-Discovery: Episode 1. Cooperation & the prime directive of the FRCP.
  • Star Trek Meets e-Discovery: Episode 2. The Ferengi. Working with e-discovery vendors.
  • Star Trek Meets e-Discovery: Episode 3. Education and techniques for both law firm and corp training.
  • Star Trek Meets e-Discovery: Episode 4. Motions for Sanctions in electronic discovery.
  • Star Trek Meets e-Discovery: Episode 5. Capt. Kirk Learns about Sedona Principle Two.
  • Last 100 Posts in Chrono Order

    Five Faces of the Black Box: How AI ‘Thinks’ and Makes Decisions

    What People Want To Know About AI: Top 10 Curiosity Index (with interactive graphic)

    Something Big Is Happening — But Not What You Think

    Lessons for Legal Profession from the Latest Viral Meme: ‘Ask an AI What It Would Do If It Became Human For a Day?’

    2025 Year in Review: Beyond Adoption—Entering the Era of AI Entanglement and Quantum Law

    AIs Debate and Discuss My Last Article – “Cross-Examine Your AI” – and then a Podcast, a Slide Deck, Infographic and a Video. GIFTS FOR YOU!

    Cross-Examine Your AI: The Lawyer’s Cure for Hallucinations

    The New Stanford–Carnegie Study: Hybrid AI Teams Beat Fully Autonomous Agents by 68.7%

    AI Talks About My Quantum Articles in Three Formats: Traditional Podcast, Debating AIs and a Video Slideshow

    Google’s New ‘Quantum Echoes Algorithm’ and My Last Article, ‘Quantum Echo’

    Quantum Echo: Nobel Prize in Physics Goes to Quantum Computer Trio (Two from Google) Who Broke Through Walls Forty Years Ago

    From Ships to Silicon: Personhood and Evidence in the Age of AI

    Hallucinations, Drift, and Privilege: Three Comic Lessons in Using AI for Law

    The Shape of Justice: How Topological Network Mapping Could Transform Legal Practice

    Epiphanies or Illusions? Testing AI’s Ability to Find Real Knowledge Patterns – Part Two

    Epiphanies or Illusions? Testing AI’s Ability to Find Real Knowledge Patterns – Part One

    Navigating AI’s Twin Perils: The Rise of the Risk-Mitigation Officer

    Panel of Experts for Everyone About Anything – Part Three: Demo of 4o as Panel Driver on New Jobs

    Panel of Experts for Everyone About Anything – Part Two: Demonstration by analysis of an article predicting new jobs created by AI

    Panel of Experts for Everyone About Anything – Part One

    Henry Kissinger and His Last Book – GENESIS: Artificial Intelligence, Hope, and the Human Spirit

    From Prompters to Partners: The Rise of Agentic AI in Law and Professional Practice

    Power Meets Platform: Legal Lessons from the Trump–Musk Dispute

    AI Can Improve Great Lawyers—But It Can’t Replace Them

    SCIENCE FICTION – Gaia’s Vigil: From Orion’s Fall to Earth’s Rise

    Bots Battle for Supremacy in Legal Reasoning – Part Five: Reigning Champion, Orion, ChatGPT-4.5 Versus Scorpio, ChatGPT-o3

    Dario Amodei Warns of the Danger of Black Box AI that No One Understands

    Zero to One: A Visual Guide to Understanding the Top 22 Dangers of AI

    Bar Battle of the Bots – Part Four: Birth of Scorpio

    Archetypes Over Algorithms: How an Ancient Card Set Clarifies Modern AI Risk

    Afraid of AI? Learn the Seven Cardinal Dangers and How to Stay Safe

    Custom GPTs: Why Constant Updating Is Essential for Relevance and Performance

    Escaping Orwell’s Memory Hole: Why Digital Truth Should Outlast Big Brother

    New Battle of the Bots: ChatGPT 4.5 Challenges Reigning Champ ChatGPT 4o

    Bar Battle of the Bots – Part Two

    Bar Battle of the Bots – Part One

    Breaking New Ground: Evaluating the Top AI Reasoning Models of 2025

    Breaking the AI Black Box: A Comparative Analysis of Gemini, ChatGPT, and DeepSeek

    Breaking the AI Black Box: How DeepSeek’s Deep-Think Forced OpenAI’s Hand

    Why the Release of China’s DeepSeek AI Software Triggered a Stock Market Panic and Trillion Dollar Loss

    The Human Edge: How AI Can Assist But Never Replace

    Sam Altman’s 2024 Year End Essay: REFLECTIONS

    Key AI Leaders of 2024: Huang, Amodei, Kurzweil, Altman, and Nobel Prize Winners – Hassabis and Hinton

    Quantum Leap: Google Claims Its New Quantum Computer Provides Evidence That We Live In A Multiverse

    A Second New Holiday Carol: “O A.I. Tree”

    A New Holiday Carol: “Frosty the AI Man”

    The Future of AI: Sam Altman’s Vision and the Crossroads of Humanity

    Singularity Advocate Series #1:  AI with a Mind of Its Own, On Trial for its Life

    GPT-4 Breakthrough: Emerging Theory of Mind Capabilities in AI

    WARNING: The Evidence Committee Will Not Change the Rules to Help Protect Against Deep Fake Video Evidence

    Two New Echoes of AI Podcasts on AI’s 11-Step Plan to Unite America

    Healing a Divided Nation: An 11-Step Path to Unity Through Human and AI Partnership

    Designing Generative AI for Legal Professionals: Key Principles and Best Practices

    Dario Amodei’s Vision: A Hopeful Future ‘Through AI’s Loving Grace,’ Is Like a Breath of Fresh Air

    Echoes of AI Podcast: Dario Amodei’s Essay on AI, ‘Machines of Loving Grace’ Is Like a Breath of Fresh Air

    DOL AI Principles: A Podcast by ‘Two Anonymous AI Podcasters’

    Can AI Replace Human Mediators? Groundbreaking Study Reveals Surprising Results

    Echoes of AI Podcast: Can AI Replace Human Mediators?

    The Future of AI Is Here—But Are You Ready? Learn the OECD’s Blueprint for Ethical AI

    Loneliness Pandemic: Can Empathic AI Friendship Chatbots Be the Cure?

    Navigating the AI Frontier: Balancing Breakthroughs and Blind Spots

    Can AI Really Save the Future? A Lawyer’s Take on Sam Altman’s Optimistic Vision

    The Problem of Deepfakes and AI-Generated Evidence: Is it time to revise the rules of evidence? – Part Two

    The Problem of Deepfakes and AI-Generated Evidence: Is it time to revise the rules of evidence? – Part One

    Generative Search Engines: Providing Answers Not Links

    Prosecutors and AI: Navigating Justice in the Age of Algorithms

    Survey Shows Legal Research is the Most Common Use of Generative AI by Lawyers: a short, ‘almost funny’ report on a Bloomberg Law survey.

    Navigating the AI Frontier: Wharton Professor’s Guide to Mastering Generative AI

    Evolution of DALL·E with Demonstrations of its Current Text to Image Abilities

    Artificial General Intelligence, If Attained, Will Be the Greatest Invention of All Time

    Back To School: A Review of Salman Khan’s New Book, ‘Brave New Words: How AI will revolutionize education (and why that’s a good thing)’

    The Great Pythia Speaks on the Dangers of AI: Insights from the Ancient Pre-Patriarchal Wisdom of the Oracle of Delphi

    Seven Problems of AI: an incomplete list with risk avoidance strategies and help from “The Dude”

    Innovating AI Communication: Real-Time Conversations Between Different ChatGPTs

    Another AI Hallucination Case with Sanctions Threatened Because of ‘All-Too-Human’ Mistakes

    Bill Gates on the Next ‘Big Frontier’ of Generative AI: Programming Metacognition Strategies into ChatGPT

    Ray Kurzweil’s New Book: The Singularity is Nearer (when we merge with AI)

    Worrying About Sycophantism: Why I again tweaked the custom GPT ‘Panel of AI Experts for Lawyers’ to add more barriers against sycophantism and bias

    ChatGPT’s Surprising Ability to Split into Multiple Virtual Entities to Debate and Solve Legal Issues

    Protected: Panel of AI Experts for Lawyers: Custom GPT Software Release June 2024 (One Year Later -June 2025 – Private, Password Required)

    Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Decides Not To Adopt Its Proposed Rule to Regulate the Use of Generative AI

    Final Test of ‘Panel of AI Experts for Lawyers’ Discussing Bruce Schneier’s Thesis on How AI May Change Democracy

    Types of Artificial Intelligence: Still Another Test of the ‘Panel of AI Experts’ on a Chart Classifying AI

    Another Test of the Panel of AI Experts on a Survey of Public Expectations of Generative AI

    BREAKING NEWS: Eleventh Circuit Judge Admits to Using ChatGPT to Help Decide a Case and Urges Other Judges and Lawyers to Follow Suit

    Omni Version Test of the Panel of AI Experts on a New Topic: “AI Mentors of New Attorneys” – Part Four

    OMNI Version – ChatGPT4o – Retest of the Panel of AI Experts – Part Three

    Experiment with a ChatGPT4 Panel of Experts and Insights into AI Hallucination – Part Two

    Evidence that AI Expert Panels Could Soon Replace Human Panelists, or is this just an Art Deco Hallucination? – Part One

    Some Legal Ethics Quandaries on Use of AI, the Duty of Competence, and AI Practice as a Legal Specialty

    Report on the First Scientific Experiment to Test the Impact of Generative AI on Complex, Knowledge-Intensive Work

    From Centaurs To Cyborgs: Our evolving relationship with generative AI

    Stochastic Parrots: How to tell if something was written by an AI or a human?

    Navigating the High Seas of AI: Ethical Dilemmas in the Age of Stochastic Parrots

    AI Copyright and the Litigious Life of Harmenszoon van Rijn Rembrandt: as explained by a talking portrait of a robot

    Stochastic Parrots: the hidden bias of large language model AI

    OpenAI Generates a ‘Hired Gun Hacker’ Defense to the N.Y. Times Copyright Case

    New Study Shows AIs are Genuinely Nicer than Most People – ‘More Human Than Human’

    Transform Your Legal Practice with AI: A Lawyer’s Guide to Embracing the Future

    Move Fast and Fix Things Using AI: Conclusion to the Plato and Young Icarus Series


 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d