American Law Institute Continuing Legal Education will present the webcast “ChatGPT and Generative AI: What Lawyers Need to Know” on Tuesday, May 2, from noon to 1 p.m.
Generative AI (GenAI) is the form of artificial intelligence that can generate data—from audio and video to text to 3D objects. GenAI—and its first public model,
ChatGPT—is being hailed as a technological breakthrough and a means for artificial intelligence to communicate, research, and create original works. GenAI is also seen as a “new” way for lawyers to draft documents, conduct legal research and perform document review.
This one-hour webcast will examine the nature of GenAI, consider its uses as a legal research and review tool, and explore the benefits and risks of the technology in legal practice. A panel of experts will explain the uses, benefits, and risks on an everyday level and beyond, including:
• What GenAI is and why lawyers should care about it
• How you ask questions and get answers from GenAI
• What kind of original works can be created
• How lawyers could use GenAI in practice
Cost for the webcast is $89. To register, visit www.ali-cle.org.
- Posted April 18, 2023
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Webcast looks at ChatGPT, Generative AI for lawyers
headlines Oakland County
- Judge’s memorial unveiled
- Commissioners approve funding to support $27.7 million in local Oakland County road projects
- Downtown Clawson captures top honor at Main Street Oakland County’s Main Event Awards Ceremony
- U.S. attorney honors Michigan first responders for exceptional acts of bravery
- Nessel joins lawsuit challenging mandates on federal contractors
headlines National
- 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence
- Federal judge who had in-chambers sex with top police officer issues clerks revised apology letters
- Criminal defense lawyer arrested, faces multiple charges after viral video of road rage confrontation
- Immigration lawyers continue to fight scammers
- Supreme Court spares Alabama man from nitrogen gas execution
- Lawyer convicted of orchestrating drug deals wins back law license




