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AI-powered law must make justice fair and equal for all – CityAM
‘AI will make legal services more accessible and affordable but it cannot take the place of legal advice or personal relationships and professional interactions, says Richard Atkinson.’ Link: https://www.cityam.com/ai-powered-law-must-make-justice-fair-and-equal-for-all/
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Protecting Human Creativity in AI-Generated Music with the Introduction of an AI-Royalty Fund – GRUR International
‘Artificial Intelligence (AI) is posited to revolutionise the creative industries, prompting global calls for legislative intervention to ensure human creativity remains at the centre of the copyright system. As AI systems gain prowess in analysing and generating content, they promise new levels of creativity and innovation at accelerated pace and reduced costs compared to human…
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Testing the capacity of Bard and ChatGPT for writing essays on ethical dilemmas: A cross-sectional study – Scientific Reports
‘Recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) have led to concerns about its potential misuse in education. As large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT and Bard can generate human-like text, researchers and educators noted the potential redundancy of tasking students with writing academic essays. We aimed to explore if the two LLMs could generate unstructured…
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Can Artificial Intelligence Replace Librarians? – An Leabharlann: The Irish Library
‘The advent of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has sparked debates across various professions, including librarianship. This article explores whether AI can replace librarians by examining the essential skills required for the profession and evaluating the extent to which AI can replicate these skills. AI has the capacity to replace database searching skills but may struggle to…
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Truly Risk-Based Regulation of Artificial Intelligence: How to Implement the EU’s AI Act – EU Law Working Papers No. 101
‘The recently adopted Artificial Intelligence Act (AI Act) of the European Union (EU) claims to be based on a risk-based approach to avoid over-regulation and to respect the principle of legislative proportionality. This paper argues that risk-based regulation is indeed the right approach to AI regulation. At the same time, however, the paper shows that…
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Developing a library strategic response to Artificial Intelligence – eLucidate
‘AI is ‘the defining technology of our generation’ according to a recent joint statement by the UK and US governments. We all understand that it is likely to impact library and information work profoundly, so it is important to try and be more than reactive and think strategically about the opportunities and problems it is…
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My Favorite Uses for AI, As an AI Skeptic – Lifehacker
‘Like the Metaverse and NFTs before it, it feels near impossible to follow tech news right now without hearing about AI. I understand it can get annoying: The tech is still in development, and everyone’s still figuring out the ethics of generating AI Art, or how to make it not suck. Then, there are the tech CEOs that promise big changes…
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Great e-Scrape: clarity needed over generative AI training – Law Society’s Gazette
‘Scrraaape! The World Wide Web is creaking under the action of web crawling bots moving from server to server, harvesting data to take back to their hives where hungry generative AI models await.’ Link: https://www.lawgazette.co.uk/commentary-and-opinion/great-e-scrape-clarity-needed-over-generative-ai-training/5121343.article
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Comparative Global AI Regulation: Policy Perspectives from the EU, China, and the US – Chun, de Witt & Elkins
‘As a powerful and rapidly advancing dual-use technology, AI offers both immense benefits and worrisome risks. In response, governing bodies around the world are developing a range of regulatory AI laws and policies. This paper compares three distinct approaches taken by the EU, China and the US. Within the US, we explore AI regulation at…
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Legal Regulation, Technological Management and the Future of Human Agency – Oxford Journal of Legal Studies
‘This article examines the role of human agency within two competing regulatory paradigms: law and technological management. It sketches both paradigms and suggests that the direction of regulatory travel in familiar jurisdictions is from the former towards the latter. It then examines the possible effect of this transition upon human agency. It defends a general…
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AI search could break the web – MIT Technology Review
‘In late October, News Corp filed a lawsuit against Perplexity AI, a popular AI search engine. At first glance, this might seem unremarkable. After all, the lawsuit joins more than two dozen similar cases seeking credit, consent, or compensation for the use of data by AI developers. Yet this particular dispute is different, and it might be…
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AI moves along ‘hype cycle’ to make its mark on legal profession – Financial Times
‘A few weeks from now, ChatGPT — the chatbot that propelled generative artificial intelligence into the mainstream — will celebrate its second anniversary.’ Link: https://www.ft.com/content/8dbeecee-c242-4b22-987b-96b492f27d1e
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Navigating research integrity in the age of AI – Springer Nature
‘The use of artificial intelligence (AI) in research holds promising benefits as well as potential threats. In a fascinating webinar titled Research integrity and AI: Navigating challenges and leveraging potential, Springer Nature’s Director of Research Integrity, Chris Graf, discusses research integrity, AI tools to detect fraudulent manuscripts, and the importance of collaboration in combating scientific…
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Lawfulness of the mass processing of publicly accessible online data to train large language models – International Data Privacy Law
‘In early 2020, the New York Times reported that ‘a little-known start-up helps law enforcement match photos of unknown people to their online images’. It was revealed that this start-up, Clearview AI, was operating a facial recognition app that could find the public photos of individuals when a picture of them is uploaded on it, thanks…
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Infringing AI: Liability for AI-Generated Outputs under International, EU, and UK Copyright Law – European Journal of Risk Regulation
‘The analysis of liability aspects facing Artificial Intelligence (‘AI’)-generated outputs under copyright and related rights has been overlooked compared to other issues connected to the development and use of AI. This study fills this gap by exploring pertinent questions under international, EU and UK law. Specifically, the study tackles actionable reproduction, allocation of liability, and…
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What you need to know about AI in the classroom – MIT Open Learning
‘In this Q&A, MIT researchers discuss the proper use of AI in schools and policy recommendations for effective learning.’ Link: https://openlearning.mit.edu/news/what-you-need-know-about-ai-classroom
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A Toolkit to Help You Manage Uncertainty Around AI – Harvard Business Review
‘Uncertainty around AI takes different shapes and forms, but we can boil it down to three main categories that every manager should consider: state, effect and response uncertainty. State uncertainty occurs when managers lack sufficient information to predict market trends and changes.’ Link: https://hbr.org/2024/10/a-toolkit-to-help-you-manage-uncertainty-around-ai
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OpenAI brings a new web search tool to ChatGPT – MIT Technology Review
‘ChatGPT can now search the web for up-to-date answers to a user’s queries, OpenAI announced today.’ Link: https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/10/31/1106472/chatgpt-now-lets-you-search-the-internet/
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Can large language models apply the law? – AI & Society
‘This paper asks whether large language models (LLMs) can apply the law. It does not question whether LLMs should apply the law. Instead, it distinguishes between two interpretations of the ‘can’ question. One, can LLMs apply the law like ordinary individuals? Two, can LLMs apply the law in the same manner as judges? The study…
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Automated decision-making and artificial intelligence at European borders and their risks for human rights – Yang, Borgesius, Beckers & Brouwer
‘Many countries use automated decision-making (ADM) systems, often based on artificial intelligence (AI), to manage migration at their borders. This interdisciplinary paper explores two questions. What are the main ways that automated decision-making is used at EU borders? Does such automated decision-making bring risks related to human rights, and if so: which risks? The paper…
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Biden Administration Issues First-Ever National Security Memorandum on Artificial Intelligence – Mayer Brown
‘On October 24, 2024, President Biden issued the first-ever National Security Memorandum (NSM) on artificial intelligence (AI), fulfilling another directive (subsection 4.8) set forth in the Administration’s Executive Order on AI and outlining how the federal government intends to approach AI national security policy. The NSM also includes a classified annex, which addresses sensitive national security issues. The release…
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Law firm uses trainees to find problems and solve them with AI – Legal Futures
‘A law firm is using teams of trainee solicitors to find problems that can be solved by artificial intelligence (AI), develop solutions and present them to managers.’ Link: https://www.legalfutures.co.uk/latest-news/law-firm-uses-trainees-to-find-problems-and-solve-them-with-ai
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AI Insights – Corporate Governance implications of the EU AI Act – Travers Smith
‘In this episode, Partner James Longster in our Technology & Commercial Transactions team sits down with Senior Associate Laura Smyth in our Operational Risk & Environment team, to discuss the Corporate Governance implications of the new EU Artificial Intelligence Act.’ Link: https://www.traverssmith.com/knowledge/knowledge-container/episode-8-ai-insights-corporate-governance-implications-of-the-eu-ai-act
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“Adopting a hands-off approach to AI in law could have unintended consequences” – The Law Society
‘There’s a lot of hype around generative AI (GenAI) – but how is it being used in lawyers’ day-to-day work?’ Link: https://www.lawsociety.org.uk/Topics/AI-and-lawtech/Features/Adopting-a-hands-off-approach-to-AI-could-have-unintended-consequences
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‘The Calculator Mistake’: Denial, hostility won’t help lawyers deal with emergence of AI – ABA Journal
‘The reality of law practice will likely be significantly different in 10 years. Will what I teach now be helpful and relevant to my students then? What does it mean to practice law well when generative artificial intelligence can already generate a mediocre legal brief, and online automated legal services can provide people with a…
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GenAI is no longer optional but a reality – Wolters Kluwer
‘The 2024 Wolters Kluwer Future Ready Lawyer Survey reveals that generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) is no longer optional but a reality in the legal industry. To stay relevant and deliver efficient services, legal professionals need to effectively apply this technology to their work. But despite the promising benefits, implementing GenAI is not without its challenges.’ Link: https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en-gb/expert-insights/gen-ai-transforming-legal-industry
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Artificial Intelligence and Administrative Discretion: Exploring Adaptations and Boundaries – European Journal of Risk Regulation
‘This paper explores the necessary adaptations to the theory of administrative discretion when using AI systems. Regulatory frameworks in the EU, US, and Spain do not prohibit the application of AI in discretionary decision-making. Particularly, AI systems can be used when discretionary power involves correlations. However, to meet Rule of Law conditions, it is essential…
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AI in terrorism sentencing: evaluating predictive accuracy and ethical implications – Criminal Justice Studies
‘This study investigates the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) to predict sentencing outcomes in terrorism-related attempted murder cases. By comparing AI model predictions with actual sentences from Israeli civilian and military courts, the research evaluates AI’s accuracy and consistency. Findings indicate that AI predictions align closely with human judgments yet also reveal significant challenges in…
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Generative artificial intelligence vs. law students: an empirical study on criminal law exam performance – Law, Innovation and Technology
‘Claims that GPT-4 can outperform more than 90% of human test-takers in the US Uniform Bar Examination have sparked heated debates about the impact of Generative AI (GenAI) on legal education, academic integrity, and the future of legal practice. Yet GenAI’s capabilities in broader legal examination contexts – including in jurisdictions outside the US –…
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AI: the five biggest risks for barristers – Counsel
‘Irresponsible use of AI can lead to serious and embarrassing consequences. Sam Thomas briefs barristers on the five key risks and how to avoid them.’ Link: https://www.counselmagazine.co.uk/articles/ai-the-five-biggest-risks-for-barristers
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Robots replacing human arbitrators: the legal dilemma – Information & Communications Technology Law
‘Robots are slowly replacing humans in many areas of the economy. This paper compares the current-day arbitration laws of Australia, Cayman Islands, European Union, India, Indonesia, Japan, Singapore, Qatar, Philippines, the United Kingdom, and the United States, which are considered arbitration friendly. The paper confirms that the respective arbitration laws do not clearly and unequivocally provide for a robot…
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Speech by the Master of the Rolls: The Digital Trading Revolution – Underpinned by Law – Courts and Tribunals Judiciary
The Digital Trading Revolution: Underpinned by Law, Legal Geek Conference 2024 Link: https://www.judiciary.uk/speech-by-the-master-of-the-rolls-the-digital-trading-revolution-underpinned-by-law/
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AI and Family Law – Financial Remedies Journal
‘AI has the real likelihood of transforming the practice of family law solicitors more than the major conceptual changes from the Children Act, the seismic shift from White or the speed of response needed from lis pendens of EU law – a transformation which will happen fast even in the slow-moving, conservative legal profession.’ Link: https://financialremediesjournal.com/content/ai-and-family-law.e9744d02a0f449808f98dc0109d1d8f2.htm?utm_source=pocket_shared
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Guide to Generative AI – Law Society of Scotland
‘The use of AI, and in particular generative AI, has the potential to transform the way legal services are provided. The purpose of this guide is to provide answers to the key issues concerning the use of generative AI that are relevant to members of the profession.’ Link: https://lawscot.org.uk/media/pl1lnu5n/ai-guide.pdf
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Empirical Assessment of Deepfake Detection: Advancing Judicial Evidence Verification through Artificial Intelligence – IEEE Access
‘Deepfake technology poses a profound challenge to the integrity of facial evidence in criminal justice, threatening the authenticity and admissibility of such evidence in the courtroom. In this research, a specialized deepfake detection system tailored for facial evidence verification was developed, aiming to counteract the influence of deepfake technology. The proposed system integrates a unique…
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This AI Tool Helped Convict People of Murder. Then Someone Took a Closer Look – Wired
‘Global Intelligence claims its Cybercheck technology can help cops find key evidence to nail a case. But a WIRED investigation reveals the smoking gun often appears far less solid.’ Link: https://www.wired.com/story/cybercheck-crime-reports-prosecutions/
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OpenAI says ChatGPT treats us all the same (most of the time) – MIT Technology Review
‘Does ChatGPT treat you the same whether you’re a Laurie, Luke, or Lashonda? Almost, but not quite. OpenAI has analyzed millions of conversations with its hit chatbot and found that ChatGPT will produce a harmful gender or racial stereotype based on a user’s name in around one in 1000 responses on average, and as many as one…
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‘It’s not me, it’s just my face’: the models who found their likenesses had been used in AI propaganda – The Guardian
‘The well-groomed young man dressed in a crisp, blue shirt speaking with a soft American accent seems an unlikely supporter of the junta leader of the west African state of Burkina Faso.’ Link: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/oct/16/its-not-me-its-just-my-face-the-models-who-found-their-likenesses-had-been-used-in-ai-propaganda
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AI in prisons and probation: new Council of Europe recommendation aims to ensure respect for human rights and dignity – Council of Europe
‘The Council of Europe has issued recommendations to its 46 member states aimed at ensuring that the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and related digital technologies by prison and probation services respects the human rights and dignity of detainees, probationers, as well as staff.’ Link: https://coe.int/en/web/portal/-/ai-in-prisons-and-probation-new-council-of-europe-recommendation-aims-to-ensure-respect-for-human-rights-and-dignity
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Future of Legal Practice: AI and the future of Law – it’s not about the tools, it’s about you (and me) – King’s College London
‘[T]he latest in the Future of Legal Practice series, with Richard Nicholas, AI Lawyer with Browne Jacobson. Richard advises business on AI projects and governance and offers training on the practical use of AI in business.’ Link: https://www.kcl.ac.uk/events/future-of-legal-practice-ai-and-the-future-of-law-its-not-about-the-tools-its-about-you-and-me
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Colonial Judicial Legacy as a Latent Challenge for the Adoption of Algorithmic Sentencing in African Courts – OpinioJuris
‘The pace at which Artificial Intelligence (AI) is transforming the face of almost every human activity cannot be ignored or overemphasized. The impacts of AI range from health, finance, telecommunication, agriculture, and security to education, administrative decision-making, etc. The judiciary is not exempted, with some countries experimenting with the use of AI algorithms in judicial decision-making, including criminal…
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The rise of the ‘machine defendant’ – who’s to blame when AI makes mistakes? – Monash University
‘Few industries remain untouched by the potential for transformation through artificial intelligence (AI) – or at least the hype.’ Link: https://lens.monash.edu/@business-economy/2024/10/15/1386909/the-rise-of-the-machine-defendant-whos-to-blame-when-an-ai-makes-mistakes
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Law Society’s new AI strategy: the three Is – Law Society
‘The Law Society of England and Wales has announced its new artificial intelligence (AI) strategy based on three pillars: innovation, impact and integrity.’ Link: https://www.lawsociety.org.uk/contact-or-visit-us/press-office/press-releases/law-society-new-ai-strategy-the-three-is
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EU AI Act checker reveals Big Tech’s compliance pitfalls – Reuters
‘Some of the most prominent artificial intelligence models are falling short of European regulations in key areas such as cybersecurity resilience and discriminatory output, according to data seen by Reuters.’ Link: https://www.reuters.com/technology/artificial-intelligence/eu-ai-act-checker-reveals-big-techs-compliance-pitfalls-2024-10-16/
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Can generative AI master Islamic inheritance law? – LSE Blogs
‘In this article, Zubair Abbasi outlines his comparative study of the accuracy of ChatGPT-4, Co-Pilot, and Gemini, to assess the accuracy of generative AI in interpreting Islamic inheritance law.’ Link: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/religionglobalsociety/2024/10/can-generative-ai-master-islamic-inheritance-law/
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Around the world in AI regulation – how the UK can become a leader in transparency – Public Law Project
‘If the UK Government wants public sector use of AI and automation to be underpinned by ‘trust and transparency’, it should learn lessons from the approaches taken elsewhere in the world and introduce key legal requirements, according to a new report from the Public Law Project (PLP). ‘ Link: https://publiclawproject.org.uk/resources/around-the-world-in-ai-regulation-how-the-uk-can-become-a-leader-in-transparency/
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Speech by the Master of the Rolls: AI and the GDPR – Courts and Tribunals Judiciary
‘The EU’s Artificial Intelligence Act began entering into force on 1 August 2024. It will take some 2-3 years to come fully into operation. The Council of Europe’s Treaty on AI and human rights, democracy and the rule of law was opened for signature on 5 September 2024 by European Justice Ministers in Vilnius. The Council of…
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How technology can support open justice and transparency: A UK perspective – Australian Law Librarian
‘This presentation examined a number of developments down the ages which have had the potential to increase transparency and public awareness of the justice system. It considers how technology from architecture to artificial intelligence can make legal information more accessible and transparent and the justice system more responsive to people’s needs. There has been a…
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Artificial Intelligence in the Legal Field: Law Students Perspective – Andreeva & Savova
‘The Artificial Intelligence field, or AI, experienced a renaissance in the last few years across various fields such as law, medicine, and finance. While there are studies outlining the landscape of AI in the legal field as well as surveys of the current AI efforts of law firms, to our knowledge there has not been…
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The ethical problems of ‘intelligence–AI’ – International Affairs
‘Interest in artificial intelligence (AI) has grown rapidly alongside the ability to examine information in far vaster quantities and from more diverse sources, and to provide previously unattainable forms of evaluation. For the intelligence community, AI offers an important solution to their data collection bottleneck, allowing the data to be processed and analysed at speeds…