"Multiple state bar associations have threatened us," Browder said. "One even said a referral to the district attorney's office and prosecution and prison time would be possible."
"The truth is, most people can't afford lawyers," he said. "This could've shifted the balance and allowed people to use tools like ChatGPT in the courtroom that maybe could've helped them win cases."
Cant have robot stealing jobs from lawyers, can you imagine a machine replacing you with no prospect of compensation? What kind of society does that with the threat of poverty 🤔.
Agree that traffic court is the best place to test shit like this but sprining it on the court in a live trial without any prior regulatory approval or oversight was never gonna fly.
Like maybe broken bones are really easy for a medical AI to diagnose in theory but no hospital is ever gonna let some guy follow the instructions of a medical AI on a live patient without going through some due diligence.
"I tried to pay a guy to let me operate on him using AI instructions and suddenly I was getting 'threats of jail' for it!"