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Articles 1 - 30 of 2145
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Ai Diversity And The Future Of “Fair” Legal Ai, Rachel Beithon, Jonathan Germann
Ai Diversity And The Future Of “Fair” Legal Ai, Rachel Beithon, Jonathan Germann
Georgia State University Law Review
The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) presents a transformative moment for the legal profession. This Article examines the increasing likelihood of AI reshaping the legal practice, highlights the critical issue of bias, and describes how a multisystem approach to AI can assist in mitigating issues of bias and ultimate fairness. This issue is especially crucial when incorporating AI in automating judicial decision-making. An open, multisystem approach serves as a strategy in mitigating potential biases embedded in AI systems. This Article posits that the thoughtful integration of AI, underpinned by a commitment to diversified systems, will ultimately lead to more …
Bridging The Gap To Every American: How A National Regulatory Sandbox Can Prompt Radical Collaboration To Adopt Legal Artificial Intelligence Tools, Samuel Hoy Brown Vii
Bridging The Gap To Every American: How A National Regulatory Sandbox Can Prompt Radical Collaboration To Adopt Legal Artificial Intelligence Tools, Samuel Hoy Brown Vii
Georgia State University Law Review
The United States of America is at a crossroads. The foundational promises of the American dream—life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—have been thrust into public pessimism as the nation’s most economically vulnerable populations find themselves outsiders in their own communities, unable to access the legal tools and services required to resolve even the most rudimentary of legal disputes. In the wake of groundbreaking studies by the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System and the American Bar Association’s Commission on the Future of Legal Services, the need for alternative legal service providers is more prevalent than ever. …
A(I)Ccess To Justice: How Ai And Ethics Opinions Approving Limited Scope Representation Support Legal Market Consolidation, Hon. C. Scott Maravilla
A(I)Ccess To Justice: How Ai And Ethics Opinions Approving Limited Scope Representation Support Legal Market Consolidation, Hon. C. Scott Maravilla
Georgia State University Law Review
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is changing our society and bringing the legal profession with it. The use of Generative AI (GenAI) in legal proceedings has received negative publicity from high profile mishaps in court filings. In one case, attorneys used the publicly available online GenAI tool, ChatGPT, to write a legal brief in which ChatGPT proceeded to make up its own citations. Following this, among other instances of the misuse of GenAI, courts have begun to require disclosures and limit the use of GenAI technology. These prohibitions, however, are the result of a fundamental misunderstanding of the appropriate use of GenAI …
Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Introduction: Ai In 2024: A Year Of Crossroads And Decisions, Patrick Parsons
Introduction: Ai In 2024: A Year Of Crossroads And Decisions, Patrick Parsons
Georgia State University Law Review
This Introduction discusses the issues and questions the legal profession must grapple with at the onset of the AI revolution.
The Keynote Address To Georgia State University College Of Law's 29th Annual Law Review Symposium - Access To Ai Justice: A Global Response To A Global Crisis, Drew Simshaw
Georgia State University Law Review
Transcript of the Keynote Address given at the 29th Annual Georgia State University Law Review Symposium on March 22, 2024. This transcript has been edited for readability and clarity.
Inside Front Cover, Georgia State University Law Review
Inside Front Cover, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Warhol, Drake, And Deepfakes: Monetizing The Right Of Publicity In The Generative Ai Era, Reid M. Koski
Warhol, Drake, And Deepfakes: Monetizing The Right Of Publicity In The Generative Ai Era, Reid M. Koski
Georgia State University Law Review
The ability to easily recreate another’s face or voice and digitally superimpose it on one’s own has led to a surge in face and voice swapping using deepfakes and deep voices. This technology uses artificial intelligence to create digital replicas with hyperreal accuracy. These digital replicas challenge the underlying premise of the transformative use test that courts use to determine whether a right of publicity infringement merits First Amendment protection. This Note finds a win-win scenario where a stricter test combined with a likeness licensing repository may both allow for public figures to monetize their likeness and provide digital replica …
Robot Lawyers Don’T Have Disciplinary Hearings—Real Lawyers Do: The Ethical Risks And Responses In Using Generative Artificial Intelligence, Hon. John G. Browning
Robot Lawyers Don’T Have Disciplinary Hearings—Real Lawyers Do: The Ethical Risks And Responses In Using Generative Artificial Intelligence, Hon. John G. Browning
Georgia State University Law Review
In the summer of 2023, the misuse of ChatGPT by two New York attorneys who filed briefs citing fabricated cases made national headlines. This cautionary tale quickly had company, as incidents of other lawyers whose use of artificial intelligence (AI) went horribly wrong filtered in from around the country, including incidents in Texas, Georgia, Colorado, and California. But it was not just errant legal research that was to blame: the cases involved everything from a faulty criminal habeas brief to flawed, mass-generated eviction pleadings by a landlord’s law firm to a high-profile white collar criminal case, in which the convicted …
Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review
Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review
First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
What Are “The Usual Burdens Of Voting”?, James M. Fischer
What Are “The Usual Burdens Of Voting”?, James M. Fischer
Georgia State University Law Review
This Article examines the development of the “usual burdens of voting” concept and looks at the evolution of voting in the United States to provide some context as to how voting burdens should be understood.
Constitutional Interpretation And Zombie Provisions, Michael L. Smith
Constitutional Interpretation And Zombie Provisions, Michael L. Smith
Georgia State University Law Review
This Article analyzes the presence of zombie provisions in the United States Constitution and state constitutions and the danger that these provisions may influence the interpretation of still-living constitutional provisions.
Federal Powers In A Pandemic, Julia Whitehead, Braden Leach
Federal Powers In A Pandemic, Julia Whitehead, Braden Leach
Georgia State University Law Review
This Article examines how the young federal government responded to infectious diseases to ascertain the limits of federal powers and analyzes how federal powers were used in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Implementing Information Fiduciaries, Samuel E. Marticke
Implementing Information Fiduciaries, Samuel E. Marticke
Georgia State University Law Review
This Note discusses the information fiduciary model, proposed by Jack Balkin, where fiduciary duties would be imposed on data collectors and analyzes how such a model could come to pass in the United States.
Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
A Case For The Ages: Thompson And Preserving The Adea Statutory Time To File, Rachel Gadra Rankin
A Case For The Ages: Thompson And Preserving The Adea Statutory Time To File, Rachel Gadra Rankin
Georgia State University Law Review
This Note analyzes the contractual shortening of the ADEA’s filing period, contrasting it with Title VII’s requirements and advocating for legislative or judicial clarification.
The Georgian Case For Harmless Constitutional Error Reform, John Evan Laughter
The Georgian Case For Harmless Constitutional Error Reform, John Evan Laughter
Georgia State University Law Review
This Note examines Georgia’s application of harmless error review to constitutional errors and proposes a new standard to remedy deficiencies.
The U.S. Dual Banking System And Interest Rate Exportation: Challenging The Valid-When-Made Doctrine In California V. Office Of The Comptroller Of The Currency, Todd P. Stephenson
The U.S. Dual Banking System And Interest Rate Exportation: Challenging The Valid-When-Made Doctrine In California V. Office Of The Comptroller Of The Currency, Todd P. Stephenson
Georgia State University Law Review
This Comment explores the extension of interest rate exportation to nonbank entities through the valid-when-made doctrine and its subsequent legal challenge in the 2022 court case California v. OCC.
Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review
Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review
First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Inside Front Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Inside Front Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Inside Front Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Inside Front Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.