Greg Sarab, the CEO of Extegrity, ran a pilot project for laptop exams at the University of...
Stephanie Francis Ward, a legal affairs writer, joined the ABA Journal staff in 2001. Stephanie had worked...
Published: | September 25, 2023 |
Podcast: | ABA Journal: Asked and Answered |
Category: | Legal Technology |
When lawyers hear the term “LLM,” their first thought may go to a master of law degree that a person earns after law school. However, the acronym also stands for “large language model,” which is technology that generates and creates writing for offerings that include ChatGPT and Google Bard. The technology doesn’t know what is accurate—that’s where lawyers come in—but the writing is impressive, it could make legal writing better and you could even use it as a writing coach, says Greg Sarab, a technologist and a lawyer.
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ABA Journal: Asked and Answered |
Featuring top of the industry guests discussing various legal topics.