Description
Artificial intelligence (AI), and its latest manifestation, generative artificial intelligence (GAI), are entrenched in news headlines and continue to work their way into legal practice more than ever before. While forms of AI have fueled e-discovery and electronically stored information (ESI) for some time, its role in search, review, and production has grown exponentially. GAI is also being used to “generate” answers to queries, including those related to legal research and brief writing.
Are AI and GAI the perfect solution to automating tasks and finding the needle in the proverbial haystack of data? This presentation will consider what AI and GAI are, what they may or may not be able to do, and how governing court rules address them.
Join a panel of legal tech experts as they explore:
- What AI and GAI are and how they can be used in civil litigation
- How the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are being adapted to account for AI and GAI
- Where “use cases” for AI and GAI apply
- Why admissibility could be problematic