The case is this: An Australian driver is accused of using a mobile phone while driving, a violation of Road Rules 2014 (NSW) Reg 300. Their defence: It was not a phone in their hand, but a misidentified juice box. Acting for them is Jeanette Merjane, a senior associate at law firm Lander & Rogers.
Also acting for them is an AI trained on legal documents.
In a bright lecture hall at the University of Technology, Sydney, SXSW Sydney session “Can AI Win a Court Case?” compares a human lawyer to NexLaw’s Legal AI Trial Copilot by having both argue the same case. While Merjane has prepared her arguments the traditional way, Copilot (not to be confused with Microsoft’s generative AI chatbot) will be prompted to generate a defence live, which is to be read by a volunteer as though they are representing themselves in court.
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