A woman sues her insurance company for terminating her disability benefits.
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Marsh Ray (@marshray@infosec.exchange)
@mjd@mathstodon.xyz “41. On October 29, 2025, OPENAI amended the terms and usage policies of ChatGPT to prohibit users from using ChatGPT to provide tailored legal advice. Prior to the October 29, 2025 emendation, ChatGPT’s terms of use did not prohibit users from using ChatGPT to draft legal papers, conduct legal research, provide legal analysis or give legal advice.”
Infosec Exchange (infosec.exchange)
@adriano @mjd Yeah. The way I read the 2024 terms, it was _already_ excluded to use ChatGPT for court filings, as:
- That requires misrepresenting AI output as human output, by putting one's name below it without mentioning it was AI slop.
- It means "relying on it".
- It would be using the output relating to a person (oneself) for a purpose that could have legal or material impact on that person (oneself).Oddly https://web.archive.org/web/20260104145304/https://openai.com/policies/row-terms-of-use/ has no changes at all regarding use as legal advice.
A real difference can be found in the usage policies: it had in 2024:
> Don’t perform or facilitate the following activities that may significantly impair the safety, wellbeing, or rights of others, including:
>
> Providing tailored legal, medical/health, or financial advice without review by a qualified professional and disclosure of the use of AI assistance and its potential limitationsNow it has:
> Protect people. Everyone has a right to safety and security. So you cannot use our services for:
>
> provision of tailored advice that requires a license, such as legal or medical advice, without appropriate involvement by a licensed professionalSo the only really new part is the mention of a "license". Otherwise they probably ran it through ChatGPT for rewording

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@mjd they also, AIUI, accuse OpenAI of generating spam that allows the abuse of the justice system. It's interesting how the legal universe will respond to the diminishing cost of writing legal text that sounds like something maybe worth attention. I guess the high cost of generating such text had shielded courts from flood until recenty.
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"Pretty sure it's common knowledge that LLMs are nothing but random text generators."
Among us? Yes. Among the rest of folks? No, it is not well known at all, most laypeople I talk to believed the hype at face value
@TeflonTrout
@divVerent @mjd @jonoleth And that's not how the product is marketed.Either hold OpenAI liable as though the product is what they claim it is, or hold them liable for fraudulently advertising it as such.
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@TeflonTrout
@divVerent @mjd @jonoleth And that's not how the product is marketed.Either hold OpenAI liable as though the product is what they claim it is, or hold them liable for fraudulently advertising it as such.
@ids1024 @TeflonTrout @mjd @jonoleth False advertising it is, IMHO.
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@milla @mjd yeah but most other professions either cannot be DDoS'ed by such texts (an engineer isn't required to read any report that comes to their desk), or have already developed methods to deal with it (email anti-spam comes to mind).
A court however has to process any suit filed that follows the correct form. (Forgive me if I'm using the wrong terms, not a lawyer and not a native English speaker) I guess what kept the courts from being utterly disabled was the cost of producing something that looked like a legit suit.
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@milla @mjd yeah but most other professions either cannot be DDoS'ed by such texts (an engineer isn't required to read any report that comes to their desk), or have already developed methods to deal with it (email anti-spam comes to mind).
A court however has to process any suit filed that follows the correct form. (Forgive me if I'm using the wrong terms, not a lawyer and not a native English speaker) I guess what kept the courts from being utterly disabled was the cost of producing something that looked like a legit suit.
@qwazix @milla I wonder if the result will be that AIs do pre-filtering on the filings before they go to a human clerk for final vetting.
At least one credible person thinks this would work.
https://adamunikowsky.substack.com/p/in-ai-we-trust
https://adamunikowsky.substack.com/p/in-ai-we-trust-part-ii -
@qwazix @milla I wonder if the result will be that AIs do pre-filtering on the filings before they go to a human clerk for final vetting.
At least one credible person thinks this would work.
https://adamunikowsky.substack.com/p/in-ai-we-trust
https://adamunikowsky.substack.com/p/in-ai-we-trust-part-ii -
@qwazix @milla I wonder if the result will be that AIs do pre-filtering on the filings before they go to a human clerk for final vetting.
At least one credible person thinks this would work.
https://adamunikowsky.substack.com/p/in-ai-we-trust
https://adamunikowsky.substack.com/p/in-ai-we-trust-part-ii@qwazix @milla Coincidentally, the same guy published another article today suggesting the same thing!
“If everyone fulfills their role—if the lawyers try their best to be both persuasive and credible and the judge tries to resolve the dispute as accurately as possible—then we’ll have AI deciding between two AI-written submissions, with the human lawyers claiming that their submissions are credible precisely because humans were not involved. So much for our legal system.”
“On the other hand, the current situation is not much better. The government claims it has no choice but to keep billions of dollars in illegally-exacted tariffs, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it. ”
“Pick your poison!”
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@marshray I wonder if that will help get them off the hook. If not, it shows that they were aware that what they were doing could be a problem.
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@qwazix @milla Coincidentally, the same guy published another article today suggesting the same thing!
“If everyone fulfills their role—if the lawyers try their best to be both persuasive and credible and the judge tries to resolve the dispute as accurately as possible—then we’ll have AI deciding between two AI-written submissions, with the human lawyers claiming that their submissions are credible precisely because humans were not involved. So much for our legal system.”
“On the other hand, the current situation is not much better. The government claims it has no choice but to keep billions of dollars in illegally-exacted tariffs, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it. ”
“Pick your poison!”
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