>*Case Western Reserve University School of Law will become the first in the nation to require all first-year law students to earn a certification in legal artificial intelligence (AI). Launching in February of this year, the “Introduction to AI and the Law” program—developed in partnership with Wickard.ai—will immerse students in the fundamentals of AI and its impact on the legal world.*
Vizth on
This makes perfect sense given that lawyers are going to have to start taking on cases revolving around how AI works, and the impact it’s going to have on society. It’s good that they’ll be prepared to do so, at least for their own bottom lines if not for anybody else.
Krow101 on
Well for a typical attorney that will make a total of 1 intelligence they possess.
MisterRogers12 on
Very interesting. I would think they will need continuous education on A.I. Hopefully they are smart enough to understand it.
koolaidismything on
Someone asked for advice in another sub a few days ago and I tried to give a good answer. A few hours he replied and said ChatGPT said the same thing and he seemed fine with me and an AI solving that.
What if the internet dies? I know all knowledge is derivative… but not like this. You won’t retain information if you don’t understand *why* that’s the answer.
It was kinda depressing. For all my faults the one thing in life that’s fun is chatting and learning for me.. so it’s not a nice thought.
PairSeveral7417 on
Hopefully AI will fully replace humans for justice and law. I don’t think we need human judges or lawyers soon.
Apprehensive-Fox4645 on
Ah [*Wickard.ai*](http://Wickard.ai), the next AI grift that no one had even heard of until right now
mollydyer on
Wouldn’t it be better for them to get a real intelligence certification instead?
8 Comments
From the article
>*Case Western Reserve University School of Law will become the first in the nation to require all first-year law students to earn a certification in legal artificial intelligence (AI). Launching in February of this year, the “Introduction to AI and the Law” program—developed in partnership with Wickard.ai—will immerse students in the fundamentals of AI and its impact on the legal world.*
This makes perfect sense given that lawyers are going to have to start taking on cases revolving around how AI works, and the impact it’s going to have on society. It’s good that they’ll be prepared to do so, at least for their own bottom lines if not for anybody else.
Well for a typical attorney that will make a total of 1 intelligence they possess.
Very interesting. I would think they will need continuous education on A.I. Hopefully they are smart enough to understand it.
Someone asked for advice in another sub a few days ago and I tried to give a good answer. A few hours he replied and said ChatGPT said the same thing and he seemed fine with me and an AI solving that.
What if the internet dies? I know all knowledge is derivative… but not like this. You won’t retain information if you don’t understand *why* that’s the answer.
It was kinda depressing. For all my faults the one thing in life that’s fun is chatting and learning for me.. so it’s not a nice thought.
Hopefully AI will fully replace humans for justice and law. I don’t think we need human judges or lawyers soon.
Ah [*Wickard.ai*](http://Wickard.ai), the next AI grift that no one had even heard of until right now
Wouldn’t it be better for them to get a real intelligence certification instead?