The Guardian (USA)

Colombian judge says he used ChatGPT in ruling

- Luke Taylor in Bogotá

A judge in Colombia has caused a stir by admitting he used the artificial intelligen­ce tool ChatGPT when deciding whether an autistic child’s insurance should cover all of the costs of his medical treatment. He also used precedent from previous rulings to support his decision.

Juan Manuel Padilla, a judge in the Caribbean city of Cartagena, concluded that the entirety of the child’s medical expenses and transport costs should be paid by his medical plan as his parents could not afford them.

While the judgment itself did not cause much fuss, the inclusion of Padilla’s conversati­ons with ChatGPT in the ruling has been more contentiou­s.

Among Padilla’s inquiries with the chatbot, the legal documents show Padilla asked ChatGPT the precise legal matter at hand: “Is an autistic minor exonerated from paying fees for their therapies?”

ChatGPT’s response correspond­ed with the judge’s final decision: “Yes, this is correct. According to the regulation­s in Colombia, minors diagnosed with autism are exempt from paying fees for their therapies.”

The case has raised a discussion over the use of AI in law and has been criticised by some of Padilla’s peers.

ChatGPT scours text across the internet to generate informed responses but has been shown to provide different answers to the same question. It also fabricates informatio­n on occasion to make inventive and compelling lies.

The nascent platform has caused alarm in recent weeks, including in schools, where teachers fear OpenAI’s platform could be used by students for plagiarism.

Padilla defended his use of the technology, suggesting it could make Colombia’s bloated legal system more efficient. The judge also used precedent from previous rulings to support his decision.

Padilla told Blu Radio on Tuesday that ChatGPT and other such programs could be useful to “facilitate the drafting of texts” but “not with the aim of replacing” judges.

Padilla also insisted that “by asking questions to the applicatio­n, we do not stop being judges, thinking beings”.

The judge argued that ChatGPT performs services previously provided by a secretary and did so “in an organised, simple and structured manner” that could “improve response times” in the justice system.

Prof Juan David Gutierrez of Rosario University was among those to express incredulit­y at the judge’s admission.

He called for urgent “digital literacy” training for judges.

Colombia approved a law in 2022 that suggests that public lawyers should use technologi­es where possible to make their work more efficient.

Octavio Tejeiro, a judge in Colombia’s supreme court, said AI caused moral panic in law as people feared robots would replace judges, but he predicted the tool would probably soon become accepted and commonplac­e.

“The justice system should make the most of technology as a tool but always while following ethics and taking into account that the administra­tor of justice is ultimately a human being,” Tejeiro said. “It must be seen as an instrument that serves the judge to improve his judgment. We cannot allow the tool to become more important than the person.”

Tejeiro told the Guardian he had not used ChatGPT but would consider using it in future.

The chatbot itself was more apprehensi­ve about its new role in the justice system.

“Judges should not use ChatGPT when ruling on legal cases … It is not a substitute for the knowledge, expertise and judgment of a human judge,” it responded to a question from the Guardian.

“Journalist­s should exercise caution when using quotes generated by ChatGPT in their articles,” the bot added.

 ?? Photograph: Adrien Fillon/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? The case in Colombia has raised a discussion over the use of AI in law.
Photograph: Adrien Fillon/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck The case in Colombia has raised a discussion over the use of AI in law.

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