šA Vancouver lawyer, Chong Ke, representing a millionaire in a contentious divorce, has been reprimanded by a B.C. Supreme Court judge for including two AI-generated "hallucinated" cases in a December application. The nonexistent cases, created by ChatGPT, aimed to support the client's bid to take his children to China. While the cases were withdrawn before the court, Ke must personally compensate her client's ex-wife's lawyers for the time spent investigating. The judge emphasized the limitations of generative AI, stressing the importance of legal expertise. Ke apologized and claimed ignorance of the risks associated with using ChatGPT.ā . ššš¬š šš§šš¢š-ššš§ššš šš„š¢š š”š šššš„š¬ šš°šš¢š! ššš”š¦šš§ šš«ššÆšš„ ššš«šÆš¢ššš¬ (ššš) ššš-šššš, ššš-ššš-šššš š¬šš„šš¬@š«šš”š¦šš§šš«ššÆšš„š¬šš«šÆš¢ššš¬.ššØš¦ @rahmantravelservices . . #LegalBlunder #ChatGPT #DivorceBattle #BCSupremeCourt #EthicsInLaw #LegalTech #CourtroomDrama #mnm #malayalisnearmeapp #canadaupdate #canadanews
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