The University of North Carolina School of Law held an unusual moot court on Friday. Futurism writes that, according to the organizers, the event called “The Trial of Henry Justus” aims to draw attention to the role of artificial intelligence in the justice system.
Three tall digital screens projected the proceedings more powerfully than even the presiding judge. Each offered its own chatbot with artificial intelligence: OpenAI’s ChatGPT, xAI’s Grok, and Anthropic’s Claude. What is the role of these artificial intelligences? They act as “jurors” who will decide the fate of a person accused of robbing minors.
Fortunately, the case was fictional. But all three of the AI chatbots that make up the jury have been used by professional lawyers in real-life cases, often leading to embarrassing mistakes. This means that technology is already influencing the outcome of cases across the country to some extent.
The introduction of artificial intelligence into the legal field remains controversial; Many lawyers who use such tools are criticized for mistakes made when working with this technology. Typically the AI gets it wrong by citing misquoted or fabricated case law; This is a manifestation of technology’s fundamental problem: “hallucinatory” misinformation that it passes off as real.
By the way, they previously wrote that artificial intelligence models may also experience “intellectual failure”.
The post The first trial with the participation of an artificial intelligence jury was first published on The Fashion Vibes.
Source: People Talk
Mary Crossley is an author at “The Fashion Vibes”. She is a seasoned journalist who is dedicated to delivering the latest news to her readers. With a keen sense of what’s important, Mary covers a wide range of topics, from politics to lifestyle and everything in between.


