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Originally Posted by Azure
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Yeah, I think liability and privacy are going to be the biggest obstacles to businesses taking advantage of it, in the short term at least.
It doesn't matter how well GPT-4 scores on a bar exam; lawyers are bound by very strict laws about what can and can't be shared with outside parties, so they can't just be dumping their info into a public tool to generate boilerplate and risk exposing their clients' private information. And the same applies to anyone creating non-public work that companies or people want to keep private or anyone who's bound by an NDA.
Longer term, I'm sure there will be more enterprise-ready solutions that will allow for much more security, but I think it will always be somewhat of an issue. There's a reason why the legal and medical fields have generally been quite conservative in adopting prior technological advances for clients'/patients' info and this will probably be no different.