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johnnyanmacyesterday at 7:58 PM1 replyview on HN

>Surely all of the AI hype is true and there are no hypocrites in Corporate America.

Worst case they are right and now we have more efficient processing. Best case, bungling up some high profile cases accelerates us towards proper regulation when a judge tires of AI scapegoats.

I don't see a big downside here.

>If they were obligated to produce it and don't they can get into some pretty bad trouble with the court.

Okay, seems easy enough to map to AI. Just a matter of who we hold accountable for it. The prompter, the company at large, or the AI provider.


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AnthonyMouseyesterday at 10:09 PM

> I don't see a big downside here.

There is an obvious downside for them which is why they don't do it. To make them do it the judge would have to order them to use AI to do it faster, which would make it a lot less reasonable for the judge to get mad at them when the AI messes it up.

> Just a matter of who we hold accountable for it. The prompter, the company at large, or the AI provider.

You're just asking who you want to have refuse to do it because everybody knows it wouldn't actually get it perfect and then the person you want to punish when it goes wrong is the person who is going to say no.

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