Contenido automatizado
Parcialmente escrito o traducido con información proporcionada por una herramienta de inteligencia artificial.

prima:Artificial intelligence is changing the way law is practiced: threat or effective tool?

Faced with the first case of lawyers referred to the Supreme Court for misquoting case law, experts warn of the fine line between the risks and benefits of these technologies

August 31, 2025 - 7:25 PM

The most common “hallucinations” or errors in the use of AI are fabricated or existing citations that the tool attributes to unrelated court cases. (Shutterstock)

Picture this scene. A lawyer needs information for a case. He has limited time and wants to maximize the use of technology. He opens his computer and logs into an artificial intelligence (AI) application. He starts copying and pasting. He asks for more case law and continues copying, unaware of the typical “hallucinations,” such as outdated information, errors in citation attribution, and even inventions about cases that the tool leads him to believe will help him in his litigation.

Popular en la Comunidad


Ups...

Nuestro sitio no es visible desde este navegador.

Te invitamos a descargar cualquiera de estos navegadores para ver nuestras noticias: