TechnologyThe world's first robot lawyer

The world’s first robot lawyer

The world’s first robot lawyer. If you’re a legal practitioner, artificial intelligence (AI) may soon come to your work.

In 2015, Joshua Browder started the company DoNoPay as a chatbot designed. To provide legal advice to consumers worried about late fees or penalties.

Five years later, he transitioned the company to an AI model. Now, the software he’s developed is deemed as “the world’s first robot lawyer.”

According to the New York Post, the AI-assisted product is ready to fight its first court case. And will assist defendants in legal battles over traffic tickets.

Background

Browder, who during his time at Stanford University became an “expert” at finding loopholes to get out of paying fines while racking up parking tickets. He said he created the company “by accident.”

Now, the founder aims to use his invention to eliminate the exorbitant fees that consumers face from increased parking tickets.

Browder believes he has developed a solution that will not only help people avoid paying for ticket. But also the legal fees associated with hiring a lawyer to help fight their case.

“This company’s goal is to make the $200 billion legal profession free for consumers,” Browder said.

Goal of the Company

According to Browder, the time it took to train the application to cover so many topics in case law was too extensive, as it aims to completely replace certain types of lawyers to save people money.

“There will still be a lot of good lawyers out there who might be arguing at the European Court of Human Rights, but a lot of lawyers are getting paid a lot to copy and paste documents and I think That they must be replaced, and they should be replaced,” he explained, according to the publication.

Another goal of Browder’s company is to have the application it created — and, accordingly, spend a lot of time training on case law covering a wide range of topics — in an effort to save people money. Change lawyers altogether.

“It’s all about language, and that’s what lawyers charge hundreds or thousands of dollars an hour,” he says, according to the New York Post.

During an upcoming case, the technology will instruct the defendant on what to say when setting up a speeding ticket in court.

In addition to serving as a legal aid, DoNoPay has pledged to “fight corporations, defeat bureaucracy and prosecute anyone at the push of a button.”

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