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AI Is Our Tower of Babel

I often tell new clients: “Google yourself. Even if you are very famous (and most of my clients are not), how much of what you know about yourself will be on the web? For most of us, the answer is, one or two percent of what we know of…
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Social Media and Conventional Media: Sometimes There’s No Difference

I always like to ask professionals, no matter their industry: “What’s a good screening question to see whether someone in your profession may be competent?” In the case of someone who does investigations, I regularly advise that if…
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The Courage to Investigate and Leave AI Behind

There was a letter awhile back in Barron’s that said, “Lawyers look backward to precedent. Innovators assiduously look forward and avoid precedent. The two mindsets are antithetical.” The letter was about why lawyers at the SEC can’t…
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Cheating, Grade Inflation, AI – What Smart Job Screeners Need to Do Next

Hiring good people is getting a lot harder, and not just because there are fewer candidates in a lot of industries. With AI-enabled cheating, grade inflation, and the shunning of standardized tests by colleges and graduate schools, how is a…
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Can ChatGPT Help in an Investigation?

ChatGPT now comes up in most of the extended conversations I have with lawyers about how things are going. Many rave about how easy it is to have this robot whip up a simple motion or even, in one example, “a short speech about NATO defense…
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The Federal Judge Scandal – a Glimpse of What AI Can Do

I was puzzled this week at the reaction to a bomb of a story by the Wall Street Journal. The paper’s rightfully cautious lawyers allowed it to go to press and declare that 131 federal judges had broken the law by hearing cases in which they…
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Why Your Investigator Should Have a Sense of Humor (Seriously)

In a partially hilarious, partially disturbing article this week in The Wall Street Journal, “Facebook Has No Sense of Humor,” the Editor in Chief of the satirical website The Babylon Bee related that two patently ridiculous “news” stories…
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When Databases Fail Us

There is a widespread belief among lawyers and other professionals that investigators, armed only with special proprietary databases, can solve all kinds of problems other professionals cannot. While certain databases are a help, we often…
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Artificial Intelligence: Good and Evil All at Once, Just Like its Creators

Have you ever noticed that artificial intelligence always seems much more frightening when people write about what it will become, but then how it can seem like imperfect, bumbling software when writing about AI in the present tense? You get…
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AI and Legal Investigation: Seek the Good, Avoid the “Perfect”

Artificial intelligence doesn’t equal artificial perfection. I have argued for a while now both on this blog and in a forthcoming law review article here that lawyers (and the investigators who work for them) have little to fear and much to…