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Unlike its generative predecessors such as Midjourney and DALL-E 2, ChatGPT seems to have caught the interest and imagination of the mainstream. I’d initially held-off writing anything on the launch of ChatGPT due to the hype that accompanies these launches, but over a month later, it is still very much in the public consciousness. While it is still early days, ChatGPT represents a significant set forward in generative Artificial Intelligence (AI), which leads us to the questions of what is generative AI? What happens next? And what does this mean for legal professionals? I’ll try my best to answer each of these, with a little help from ChatGPT along the way!
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Time-constrained law firm leaders need to maximise available tools so that they can do more of what they love
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Aya Riola believes in the Rule of Law advocacy and the delivery of value-based customer engagement.
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The ability to call up tailored information quickly is invaluable in the delivery of law today
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The COVID-19 pandemic is creating once-in-a-lifetime challenges and change. For lawyers, creating a new work from home routine and establishing boundaries has been the critical first step in establishing a new normal. In this series, we talk to lawyers from different sectors of the industry about how they’ve adapted during the early weeks of this global pandemic.
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This article from the New Zealand Family Law Journal argues that an adopted child should not automatically succeed to Māori land purely on the basis that they have been legally adopted. It takes a deeper dive, explaining how automatic succession to an adopted child works directly against Tikanga Māori.
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Despite a 30-year career in South Korea’s public service, Yoon Jong-in had never imagined himself as the country’s top privacy officer, nor had he expected to be chosen to build a government agency from scratch and provide the groundwork for the country’s data-privacy rules.
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Ksenia Stepanova of NZ Lawyer Magazine sat down with LexisNexis head of content management Chris Murray to discuss how the face of legal publishing is changing in response to the needs of modern lawyers.
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“Digital” has largely described the way in which the modern world exists. Not having a gadget of some kind – whether it’s a smartphone, tablet or laptop – is unthinkable in this day and age. We do everything online now, from ordering food to getting directions.
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Justice Joseph Williams, in his seminal paper, “Lex Aotearoa: An Heroic Attempt to Map the Māori Dimension in Modern New Zealand Law”, describes New Zealand law in a third stage of evolution.