JUSTICE BUILDING BLOG

WELCOME TO THE OFFICIAL RICHARD E GERSTEIN JUSTICE BUILDING BLOG. THIS BLOG IS DEDICATED TO JUSTICE BUILDING RUMOR, HUMOR, AND A DISCUSSION ABOUT AND BETWEEN THE JUDGES, LAWYERS AND THE DEDICATED SUPPORT STAFF, CLERKS, COURT REPORTERS, AND CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS WHO LABOR IN THE WORLD OF MIAMI'S CRIMINAL JUSTICE. POST YOUR COMMENTS, OR SEND RUMPOLE A PRIVATE EMAIL AT HOWARDROARK21@GMAIL.COM. Winner of the prestigious Cushing Left Anterior Descending Artery Award.

Sunday, May 28, 2023

EPIC FAIL

 No, the title of the post does not relate to the admittedly heartbreaking loss of the Miami Heat Saturday night. Although it pains us to say it, the Heat courageously battled back from multiple Celtic double-digit leads on Saturday night before a packed Biscayne Boulevard arena packed with white-shirt-wearing fans making their first showing at a Heat game this year, paying triple the price of a ticket, and pretending to be loyal fans.  

Props to J Butler who was ice with three seconds left, nailing three free throws to put your Miami Heat up by one. Alas, you have to box out under the boards, or the opposing team will scoop up a missed shot and tap it in for the win, which is just what happened. 

Game 7 is Monday. We might, just might be in Beantown with a ticket, wearing Green. 

The title of our post refers to the article making the rounds where a lawyer used ChatGBT to write a response to a motion. The bot, feeling a bit frisky, created fake case names and cites that the lawyer used in the motion. The other side, not being as lazy as the author of the brief, actually tried to pull the cases, and alerted the court they did not exist. One case centered around a fictitious 11th Circuit Court of Appeals decision, so the district judge went so far as to call the clerk of the 111th Ciruit to ask whether the case existed. It did not. 

The only defense the lawyer who wrote the bot brief had was that he apparently asked the bot if the cases he cited were real. And the bot replied that they were. Which brings us to this new maxim of law- "Never trust a bot with whom which you haven't shared your fee. "

What kind of lawyer cites cases that s/he doesn't bother to read? 

There's lots of articles on this mishap, here's one you can check out. 


 Southern District of New York Judge Kevin Castel said in an order. Lawyer Steven Schwartz claimed it was his first time using ChatGPT for a case, and he “was unaware of the possibility that its content could be false.” Schwartz, who will face a sanctions hearing next month, said in an affidavit that he “greatly regrets having utilized generative artificial intelligence to supplement the legal research” and “will never do so in the future without absolute verification.” In his affidavit, he included screenshots of ChatGPT swearing the fake cases were real and even cited real legal databases the lawsuits were supposedly stored in.

Mr. Schwartz, who has practiced law in New York for three decades, told Judge P. Kevin Castel that he had no intent to deceive the court or the airline. Mr. Schwartz said that he had never used ChatGPT, and “therefore was unaware of the possibility that its content could be false.”

He had, he told Judge Castel, even asked the program to verify that the cases were real.

It had said yes.

The NY Times covers it here. 

Rumpole notes that the bot had it's AI fingers crossed behind its back. 

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

WRONG ! I take offense to your characterization of the Miami Heat fan base. I consider myself an ardent Heat fan. This year I've attended two games in person and watched another three on television. And, for your information, I've done this every single year since the team was founded. There are millions, just like me in the 305.

Anonymous said...

Rumpole,

I feel bad for ChatGPT. It, unlike members of the Bar, does not know how to reason. GPT has taken an admonishment more forceful than the verbal reprimand Chief Justice Muñiz gives to members are the Bar facing discipline.

Lawyers are expected to think about ideas, formulate arguments, and be able to communicate them in a clear manner. GPT, on the other hand, generates sentences one word at a time, with little ability to contextualize each token (the fancy name for each word it generates).

Lawyers are ready for AI, but AI is not ready for the demands of lawyers -- barring a few software programs.


Briefly,

A tech-savvy, REGJB frequenter

Anonymous said...

Is this Blog written totally by ChatGPT?

How do we know if there truly is a Rumpole … and not some server or cloud service based out of Truckee, California or at some fancy lake resort for the rich in Switzerland?

Rumpole said...

Well here I am in Boston. Just need a ticket.

Anonymous said...

Phil. good luck getting a ticket. Can you afford one?

Rumpole said...

824 yes.
1025 dumbass now what ?

Anonymous said...

Good for you Rumpole. 1025 is a puzzy coward who is probably spending the Holiday weekend eating papa John’s and Wanking off to Netflix soft porn. What a loser.

Anonymous said...

Has anyone told the DV judges that the pandemic is over? They still do everything by Zoom. Why? Safie and Kelly are OK with this? The rest of the circuit is back to normal.

Anonymous said...

Rumpole, did you get the tickets? Do tell if you see another FTX-backing celebrity get served.

Signed,

The tech-savvy REGJB frequenter

Anonymous said...

Rumpole:

I love the diatribe and I will continue to follow the blog because you are a talented bloke but brother you are Miami and you should embrace it.