Jerrold Soh (Singapore Management University Law) has posted “NLP in the Legal World” on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This talk situates the rising field of NLLP in the context of legal scholarship and emerging trends in legal AI practice and regulation. It centrally suggests that, as NLP’s domain of competence expands, it would have to undergo, and is in several ways already undergoing, a fundamental transformation we might refer to as “growing up”. In particular, to succeed in the legal world, NLP technology has to contend with three key aspects of adulthood: new attitudes, new consequences, and new responsibilities. Lawyers have gone from complete AI skepticism to actively exploring use cases. Encroaching into fields like medicine, law, and finance means technologists cannot avoid dealing with difficult questions around protecting life, liberty, and money. An entire new AI rulebook is currently being written by regulators and courts around the world. Against this backdrop, the talk examines how NLLP relates to existing inquiries in computational law, AI and Law, and computational/empirical legal studies and identifies opportunities for inter-field discourse. It concludes by identifying the unique role that NLLP researchers can play in the increasingly controversial (and seemingly, decreasingly scientific) global debate on the use and regulation of large language models.
