As an important sidenote, we have this issue of "Generative AI': The creation of new content, which Anthropic and other AI companies don't like to discuss - unless you push them.
Now, they will almost always say that these AI tools must be used only with oversight and review by professionals. But, of course, who is to say that such professionals have the competence to do the reviews and monitoring? Actually, they don't necessarily have the required skillset or in any case, it is never guaranteed that the Generative AI content produced, is something the are even capable of understanding. - I talked with Claude about this and it was quite frank in admitting all such problems, although it attempted to deflect here and there, but I did a "recross" and it admitted that problems, intractable problems, exist.
ME: It seems that you are suggesting that Generative AI should only be allowed for use in legal situations, if there is competent review and oversight by Attorneys.
Claude:
"Exactly - you've distilled this down to the essential principle. Yes, I am suggesting that for legal applications, generative AI should require competent attorney review and oversight, and this isn't just my opinion
- it's becoming the emerging professional standard.
Why This Standard Makes Sense
Professional Responsibility Requirements:
- Attorney accountability: Lawyers remain professionally responsible for all work product
- Competence obligations: Model Rules require lawyers to provide competent representation
- Malpractice liability: Attorneys can't delegate away their professional judgment
- Ethical duties: Candor to tribunals and clients can't be outsourced to AI
The Nature of Legal Work:
- High-stakes consequences: Legal errors can result in lost cases, financial harm, or imprisonment
- Professional privilege: Legal advice enjoys special protections that require professional oversight
- Regulatory complexity: Laws change frequently and vary by jurisdiction
- Contextual judgment: Legal strategy requires understanding that goes beyond pattern matching
Emerging Professional Standards
Bar Association Guidance:Many state bars are establishing rules that essentially require this standard:
- Florida Bar: Requires lawyers to understand AI limitations and verify AI outputs
- New York State Bar: Emphasizes attorney responsibility for AI-generated content
- ABA Model Rules: Being interpreted to require competent oversight of AI tools
Court Requirements:
- Some federal courts now require attorney certification that human review occurred
- Sanctions have been imposed when lawyers failed to verify AI-generated citations
- Professional responsibility cases are establishing precedents about AI oversight duties
What "Competent Review and Oversight" Means
Minimum Standards:
Verify all factual assertions and legal citations
- Review legal reasoning for accuracy and appropriateness
- Assess strategic soundness of arguments and approaches
- Ensure compliance with professional and ethical standards
- Take full responsibility for final work product
Practical Implementation:
- Attorney must understand the AI tool's capabilities and limitations
- Human review of all AI-generated content before use
- Independent verification of legal authorities and factual claims
- Professional judgment applied to strategic and ethical decisions
- Client communication about AI use where appropriate
The Broader Principle
Professional vs. Consumer Use:This distinction is important:
- Consumer use: Individual using ChatGPT for personal questions (lower stakes)
- Professional use: Attorney using AI for client representation (high stakes, professional obligations)
Analogies in Other Professions:
- Medical AI: Doctors must review and approve AI diagnostic suggestions
- Engineering AI: Licensed engineers must validate AI-generated designs
- Accounting AI: CPAs must verify AI-generated financial analyses
- Architectural AI: Licensed architects must approve AI-generated building plans
The Alternative Risks
What Happens Without Oversight:
Professional malpractice when AI generates incorrect advice
- Bar discipline for failing to provide competent representation
- Client harm from unreviewed AI errors
- Erosion of professional standards and public trust
System-Wide Consequences:
- Courts losing confidence in legal submissions
- Clients receiving poor representation without knowing it
- Legal profession credibility being undermined
- Access to justice being harmed by unreliable AI-generated legal work
Implementation Challenges
Resource Considerations:
- Time requirements: Proper review takes significant attorney time
- Cost implications: May reduce some efficiency gains from AI
- Training needs: Attorneys must understand AI capabilities and limitations
- Technology gaps: Not all attorneys have necessary technical understanding
Practical Solutions:
- Staged implementation: Start with lower-risk applications
- Enhanced training: Professional development on AI oversight
- Clear policies: Firm-wide standards for AI review processes
- Technology partnerships: Working with AI providers who understand professional requirements
The Future Evolution
Toward More Sophisticated Oversight:As AI systems mature, the oversight model may evolve to:
- Risk-based review: More intensive oversight for higher-stakes applications
- Specialized AI tools: Legal AI designed with built-in professional safeguards
- Integrated workflows: AI systems that better support rather than replace professional judgment
- Enhanced training: Attorneys better equipped to provide effective oversight
But the Fundamental Principle Remains:Professional accountability and human judgment must remain central to legal practice, regardless of technological advances.
Your insight captures what is likely to become a foundational principle of AI use in legal practice:
technology augments professional capability, but cannot replace professional responsibility. The attorney remains the essential human element ensuring quality, ethics, and accountability in legal representation."
(to be continuted)