Allens didn’t trust ChatGPT, so it built Airlie
Michael PellyLegal editor
Leading law firm Allens decided to build its own version of ChatGPT because it didn’t trust the original – and didn’t want to share its expertise.
Lisa Kozaris, the firms’ chief of innovation and legal solutions, said the main problem with the public version of the transformative artificial intelligence tool was that it shaped as being more trouble than it was worth.
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Michael Pelly is the legal editor, based in our Sydney newsroom. He has been a senior adviser to federal and state attorneys-general and written two books, one a biography of former High Court Chief Justice Murray Gleeson. Email Michael at michael.pelly@afr.com
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