Don't use ChatGPT for legal website content

by WarriorForum.com Administrator
19 replies
Just don't. ChatGPT often produces inaccurate information and it's not worth the risk publishing legal content that might affect your business, or worse land you in hot water.
#chatgpt #content #legal #website
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  • Profile picture of the author jishuai yan
    Yes, but it can't be avoided
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  • Profile picture of the author Advoke
    Couldn't agree more. I am a lawyer by profession and we help online businesses, majorly the eCommerce sector, with their compliances.
    At my firm, we noticed that most of the fines imposed by regulatory authorities on small/medium scale business were due to the fact that they were using generic template-based and AI generated policies and agreements.
    Let's take an example here. If you ask ChatGPT to draft a Privacy Policy for your website, it will be more than happy to serve you with a generic template which it probably picked up from somewhere in the internet. However, AI chatbots do not have the capability to ASK QUESTIONS. What type of business is it? Where is it located? What kind of activities are you involved in? All of these are very relevant questions which need to be addressed in order to comply to the several million laws we have in the world.
    We cannot completely blame AIs though. They do come with the disclosure which goes like "This is only a template. Please consult with your legal representative before using this...". Rather, it is the ignorance of the people using these drafts towards legal compliance.
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    • Profile picture of the author max5ty
      Originally Posted by Advoke View Post

      Couldn't agree more. I am a lawyer by profession and we help online businesses, majorly the eCommerce sector, with their compliances.
      At my firm, we noticed that most of the fines imposed by regulatory authorities on small/medium scale business were due to the fact that they were using generic template-based and AI generated policies and agreements.
      Let's take an example here. If you ask ChatGPT to draft a Privacy Policy for your website, it will be more than happy to serve you with a generic template which it probably picked up from somewhere in the internet. However, AI chatbots do not have the capability to ASK QUESTIONS. What type of business is it? Where is it located? What kind of activities are you involved in? All of these are very relevant questions which need to be addressed in order to comply to the several million laws we have in the world.
      We cannot completely blame AIs though. They do come with the disclosure which goes like "This is only a template. Please consult with your legal representative before using this...". Rather, it is the ignorance of the people using these drafts towards legal compliance.
      I can understand what you're saying, but I'll tell you what happened to me...

      a few months ago I started 2 newsletters. One bombed and the other one is getting way too big for me to handle by myself.

      Anyway, I was trying to put the finishing touches on a landing page. I went to Bard and asked:

      'If I wanted you to write a privacy policy for my website, what questions would you need to ask me?'

      It gave me 21 questions. I then asked if I answered all these questions would it be able to do a Privacy Policy for me, and it said:

      'Once I have this information, I can draft a privacy policy for you and send it to you for review. You can then make any necessary changes and publish the policy on your website.'

      But here's the crazy part...

      I asked it if the policy would be legal and it said it couldn't 100% guarantee it, but it would run the policy by a lawyer before it presented it to me.

      I asked what lawyer, and got this:

      'I will have a lawyer from Google AI review the privacy policy that I create for you. Google AI has a team of experienced lawyers who specialize in privacy law. They will review the policy to ensure that it is compliant with all applicable laws and regulations.'

      Long story short, it did the policy and it seemed pretty good...then again I'm not an attorney and now that the newsletter is going like crazy I may run it by a legal expert.

      Didn't really understand the whole Google AI lawyer thing though
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      • Profile picture of the author Advoke
        Hey, thanks for the reply.
        Well yeah, I have been using Bard for my research for a while as well and even I wasn't aware that Google had something like that. If it says "I will have a lawyer from Google AI...", I think it means Bard will provide you with the most appropriate text from its knowledge base. I doubt there's an actual lawyer reading through our prompts and reviewing the output. Otherwise, that could be an infringement of privacy in itself.
        Be that as it may, compliance (especially for stricter laws like the CCPA or the GDPR) is something that can only be achieved through rigorous interaction and deliberation. So yeah, I second your decision to get it reviewed by an expert. Congratulations on your success with the newsletter!
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  • Profile picture of the author Digita12
    I agree to this
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  • Profile picture of the author Edward Matthew
    I totally agree with you, its not appropriate to use chatbot for legal websites.
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  • Profile picture of the author writeaway
    In fact, it's a bad idea to have a non-law student/non-paralegal/non-lawyer produce legal content

    You might just be cruising for a lawsuit.

    You know how picky attorneys can get.... especially if they smell a nice SETTLEMENT down the road.

    The same goes for TERMS AND CONDITIONS text... especially for APPS with special or PREVIOUSLY UNKNOWN features
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  • Profile picture of the author denden16
    it's a good site to get ideas. but I agree. only AI content does not lead to success. it does not bring success. people produce more valuable content.
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  • Profile picture of the author Ged3
    Good Post,


    when it comes to A.I. for legal matters it does not look very reliable.


    Not surprising really when there is so much statute law and legal precedents to be aware of - A.I. can only find out information from what is published on the web.



    Good news for lawyers, who study had for their qualifications.


    I cannot really see it making 300 million people redundant in a few years time.


    There are just far too many different qualities employees need that A.I. does not have and probably never will.


    Robots will need to improve massively.


    Would you trust one to even make a cup of coffee with two sugars for you



    Ged
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  • Profile picture of the author Kay King
    it does not look very reliable

    Just as it 'creates' book titles to used as footnotes/references....A.I. also 'creates' case studies to back up its legal treatises. One lawyer in the news discovered that recently....you'd think a lawyer would know better, wouldn't you?
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  • Profile picture of the author CyberSEO
    Originally Posted by WarriorForum.com View Post

    Just don't. ChatGPT often produces inaccurate information and it's not worth the risk publishing legal content that might affect your business, or worse land you in hot water.

    Yes, it generates inaccurate, misleading, and even hallucinatory content...sometimes, but is there a 100% guarantee that a paid human copywriter won't...sometimes?
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  • Profile picture of the author Kay King
    A human is not as likely to produce imaginary cases as proof - because the human can face consequences for doing that.


    For A.I. - no consequences.
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    • Profile picture of the author CyberSEO
      Originally Posted by Kay King View Post

      A human is not as likely to produce imaginary cases as proof - because the human can face consequences for doing that.
      You don't know humans

      E.g:: "Fun and delicious at McDonald's - all for the kids!"

      This ad is written by real humans. AI, in turn, is unlikely to advise you to feed your children at McDonald's...
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  • Profile picture of the author bijutoha
    I understand your concern. While ChatGPT can provide general information, consulting legal professionals for accurate and reliable legal advice is always advisable. Legal matters require precise and up-to-date information, and relying solely on an AI language model like ChatGPT may not be sufficient. It is essential to prioritize the accuracy and credibility of legal content to avoid any potential risks or legal issues.
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  • The diffrence between presentin' the most fictional front evah an' protectin' yr ass from IRL demise nevah grows old.

    Hence the legal profession an' like belly dancin'.

    That is why I nevah write no legal stuff for nowan, an' would considah anywan who trusts AI to do same to be a FRICKIN' MORON.
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    Lightin' fuses is for blowin' stuff togethah.

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  • Profile picture of the author r1chb3
    It depends. Someone I know is educating law, and sometimes uses ChatGPT 4 for help.

    For creating TOS or any Policies for your website, it is recommended that you reach out to a real lawyer, instead of using the cheaper variant with ChatGPT...
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  • Profile picture of the author Kay King
    AI, in turn, is unlikely to advise you to feed your children at McDonald's...

    Advertising and truth are not synonymous....but neither are "AI created" and truth.


    My sons were deprived - they never ate at McDonalds growing up. I didn't think it was good for them.
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  • Profile picture of the author iammaryy
    I agree! Instead of using gpt, try to collect the information and authenticate it. Then try to put them in your own words. It will surely help to grow business.
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  • Profile picture of the author 7amoudymh
    My personal opinion is that you shouldn't use ChatGPT at all, not just in the legal field. Yes, content is important, and it takes a lot of time, but writing it organically produces more advantages.

    I think this guide on law firm SEO by Gerrid Smith describes how that should be done. In short, write well, post new content often, and choose topics carefully.
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  • Profile picture of the author harshit badodhe
    It's true that when dealing with legal content, accuracy is critical, and relying solely on AI-generated content could pose risks. That's why it's essential to have human oversight, especially for content that could have legal implications.

    AI can be a useful tool for generating ideas or providing general information, but it should always be supplemented with professional legal advice. In sensitive areas like law, a combination of AI and expert review might be the best approach to ensure accuracy and compliance.

    If anyone has experience balancing AI tools with legal content creation, I'd be interested in hearing your strategies!
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