Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

What's stopping them from making a new law that says that all current rules are null and void and just start over with 'make sure people don't get killed by defective buildings' and a short list of valid objections and all made public to both officials and the people in general? This is something I find odd and frustrating with common law, the need to pay attention to thousand years old precedent to the point now people need AI bots to check them all.

Ok, here in my country we still had a Visigothic code of commerce originally made in the seventh century a hundred years ago. But it has been long gone and nobody can use it to make up a case of law today.
Most countries that use common law don’t have significant laws that old that are actually still valid.

And with modern research tools, it’s pretty easy to find it when when which laws were voided, overturned, revised, etc.
 

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It's not specific to common law to have complicated exemptions. Because oversimplifying texts will either lead to unwanted side effect -- for example, if you forgot to add an earthquake exemption to the "don't build houses that kill you", then a lot of people will go to jail when an earthquake happens -- and also, "building houses" isn't just a matter of physical injury. You might want rules to protect the environment (don't use pollutant in the building), the historical value of another building (don't build a jarring gaudy building just in front of a historically significant building), the rights of neighours (if you buy a house in a quiet residential district, you might be able to convince politicians that you're harmed if a heavy industry is built next to your house)...

The most recent rewrite of the building code in France, a purely civil law country, dates back from 2018 and it isn't simpler than common law country regulations. I'd guess it's even more stringent than most common law countries.

WRT to old regulations, it can happen in civil law countries, too: I still find very funny to pass judgements mentionning a 1539 royal edict -- even in civil law countries, you can get some surviving pieces of legislation. Basically, it is unwise to say "everything until now is void and here is the new system": you might mistakenly make legal some awful things. When the French authorities in 1945 wanted to undo the legislations passed during WWII by both the occupying German forces and the collaborationist Vichy government, they cancelled a few specific texts but dared not undo everything without prior individual review: saying "everything done by unlawful authorities is void" was considered, but unlawful authorities did a lot of harmless and even useful things, like deciding on local speed limit, and they didn't want to just cancel everything.
 
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The law is a bachelor.

The law is a dagger that is gripped by the blade.

In practice, the law favors class, wealth, privilege and other factors besides. Without those, you're down to pure luck or a sympathetic judge, and hopefully some nice people in the jury box to gamble with your fate when you show up at the casino in your suit and tie, hoping that you look sincere.

One may choose or not to interact with AI chatbots - no one except litigants, lawyers, and judges chooses to interact with the law - everyone else would rather be doing anything else.
 

Yes.
And note how folks don't mistake a hammer for an all-purpose tool? That's the point.
The whole quote: "it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail."
It's not for nothing that there's a 150+ year old term for it, a "Birmingham screwdriver". More info: Law of the instrument - Wikipedia
Just because people (should) know better, doesn't mean they actually act better...
But, really, you don't only have a hammer. You have a human brain.
Right?
RIGHT??!??!
Sure, people have had human brains for thousands of years, but they still kept using that hammer for everything. And that's also the case with LLM and image generation, people get one tool and want to do everything with it, not asking if that's the best tool for the job, not asking if the output is actually desirable or correct, it just seems correct. These tools give power to people, real and imagined power... It gives people that don't have the skills, the willingness or ability to learn, a tool that would seemingly allow them to do things they normally couldn't.

Compare it to cars becoming popular (in the US), sure people could still walk, bike or use a horse, but going long distances made cars more desirable. Cars were dangerous to people, unclean, unhealthy, expensive, required a lot of expensive infrastructure, etc. People aren't even that skilled at driving... Looking specifically at the US, it's still a very car centric country, many countries aren't anymore, even though they initially followed the US example after WW2... I expect similar things to happen all over the world, countries/cultures that will rely heavily on LLM and image generation, while others won't...

And what people call 'AI' is just the next step in the industrialization, automation trend of the last 250+ years. And you could go even further back where people were replaced by animals, animals replaced by primitive machines (windmills for example), etc. in the two decades before LLM and image generation became common, I was already hard at work replacing people with computer systems/processes, heck often even replacing myself. But now suddenly LLM and image generation are 'problematic' amongst a certain subset of the population... But I remember protests in my youth when factories got automated, the world didn't end, those people got new jobs. Heck, around here unemployment is now significantly lower then in my youth.
 

The law is a bachelor.

The law is a dagger that is gripped by the blade.

In practice, the law favors class, wealth, privilege and other factors besides.

And yet, “Between the strong and the weak, between the rich and the poor, between the master and the servant, it is freedom that oppresses and the law that liberates.” (Lacordaire)
 

The whole quote: "it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail."
It's not for nothing that there's a 150+ year old term for it, a "Birmingham screwdriver". More info: Law of the instrument - Wikipedia

Thank you for pointing out this link (and for allowing me to put a source on the quote).
And what people call 'AI' is just the next step in the industrialization, automation trend of the last 250+ years. And you could go even further back where people were replaced by animals, animals replaced by primitive machines (windmills for example), etc. in the two decades before LLM and image generation became common, I was already hard at work replacing people with computer systems/processes, heck often even replacing myself. But now suddenly LLM and image generation are 'problematic' amongst a certain subset of the population... But I remember protests in my youth when factories got automated, the world didn't end, those people got new jobs. Heck, around here unemployment is now significantly lower then in my youth.

The question that remains is, "do we still have unfilled jobs to fill?". When we replaced our hunters-gatherer with peasants, it freed manpower to occupy jobs as shaman and soothsayers that we needed greatly. When we had enough of them and they invented a lot of new technology with their free time, we had a hard time turning enough peasants into craftsmen, until agricultural progress (and demographic increase) allowed for more peasants to turn into workers. With automation, we freed workers to work into a needed service industry (we could easily use more servants) without losing the manufactured goods. When we'll free people from doing service jobs, the question is "what will we make them do?" The answer can be "nothing", "jobs aptly described by David Graeber that are forbidden to name here by the anti-anthropology filter", or "a new wave of yet-to-be-invented useful purpose". All three have been explored in science-fiction.

While the emergence of new needs has always worked so far and is certainly something that should assuage the fears of our time, it is not possible to rule out the other possibilities. I for one would very much like to live long enough to see humanity freed from the need to work.
 
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