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by liampulles
782 days ago
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Key point here is that the implementation combines an LLM summary with DIRECT REFERENCES to the source material: https://hotseatai.com/ans/does-the-development-and-deploymen... That seems to me a sensible approach, because it gives lawyers the context to make it easy to review the result (from my limited understanding). I wonder if much of what would want couldn't be achieved by analyzing and storing the text embeddings of legal paragraphs in a vector database, and then finding the top N closest results given the embedding of a legal question? Then its no longer a question of an LLM making stuff up, but more of a semantic search. |
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In the long run, perhaps the most dangerous aspect of LLM tech is how much better it is at faking a layer of metadata which humans automatically interpret as trustworthiness.
"It told me that cavemen hunted dinosaurs, but it said so in a very articulate and kind way, and I don't see why the machine would have a reason to lie about that."