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Notes -
I have no idea. The odd thing is that one of the tasks they specifically advertise their AI for is contract evaluation. I'm not a contract lawyer so I'm in no position to comment, though I wouldn't be surprised if the service they're offering does something that lawyers don't have to do. One of the things that I chuckle about is that they say AI can draft documents. I'm sure it can, but that's kind of irrelevant. I draft a lot of motions, but I'm not reinventing the wheel every time. Usually I have my secretary find a similar motion, change the case caption, and spend 1/2 hour to an hour editing it to fit with the facts of the current case. I don't see how it would save any time by entering those facts into the AI prompt instead, and I can easily see how it could take more time since I'd now have to review the entire document in greater detail so I understood what I was filing, rather than, say, assume that my secretary hadn't touched the part where I explain the summary judgment standard.
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