this post was submitted on 03 Mar 2025
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All you do is a quick search on the case to see if it's real or not.
They bill enough each hour to get some interns to do this all day.
You could easily. We have resources such as LexusNexus or Westlaw which your firm should be paying for. Even searching on Google Scholar should be enough to verify. Stay away from Casetext though, it's new and mostly AI. LN and WL also have AI integration but it's not forced, you're still capable of doing your own research.
I've been telling people this for a while, but everyone needs to treat AI like how we used to treat the wiki. It's a good secondary source that can be used to find other more reliable sources, but it should never be used as your single standalone source.
I'm not going to sugarcoat it, AI is being forced everywhere you look and it is getting a bit difficult to get away from it, but it hasn't taken over everything to the point where there is no longer any personal responsibility. People need to have some common sense and double check everything as they've been taught to do even before AI.
I'm pretty sure that just doing "quick searches" is exactly how he ended up with AI answers to begin with.
I don't think PACER or the state equivalents use AI summary tools yet.