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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
August 19, 2024 9:36 AM
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Ce guide méthodologique a été conçu pour fournir : • une cartographie des gisements d’informations disponibles pour toutes les sources du droit français, du droit de l’Union européenne et du droit international (législation, jurisprudence, doctrine), • une description plus détaillée des données et outils essentiels, accompagnée de trucs et astuces pour une utilisation efficace, • une méthode de travail adaptable à tous les types de recherche et des conseils plus pointus pour des requêtes et investigations spécialisées.Le corps du texte s’accompagne d’outils permettant d’acquérir des compétences en recherche d’information juridique : des copies d’écran illustrent les procédures, des résumés permettent de mémoriser les points essentiels, des focus approfondissent certains aspects plus complexes. Privilégiant la pratique et une approche la plus concrète possible, l’ouvrage devrait être utile à l’étudiant en licence ou master, au professionnel du droit ou de l’information juridique. Au-delà, il devrait intéresser toute personne souhaitant : • se former à la recherche documentaire juridique, • vérifier ou actualiser ses connaissances dans le domaine, • former des étudiants à ce type de recherche, • mesurer l’impact de l’intelligence artificielle sur la recherche d’information juridique.
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 21, 4:19 PM
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 21, 8:21 AM
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Comparer les bases de données juridiques grâce à l'étude de Juriconnexion
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Stéphane Cottin
January 20, 1:25 AM
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This paper presents an outline of our research project developed at our research center for "Juris-Informatics". "Juris-Informatics" is a research field based on two main topics; "Law by AI" and "Law of AI". "Law by Ai" is a research field where we investigate a support tool by AI for legal activities such as legal reasoning and legal document processing. "Law of AI" is a research field where we conduct research on legal control of AI such as considering the legal responsibility of AI and legal compliance of AI.
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 18, 1:42 AM
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Dans une démarche pragmatique, la commission des lois du Sénat a lancé le 3 avril 2024 une mission d’information sur « l’impact de l’IA générative sur les métiers du droit ». Le rapport publié le 18 décembre 2024 (145 pages), dont les deux rapporteurs sont Christophe-André Frassa et Marie-Pierre de la Gontrie, formule 20 propositions.
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 9, 11:46 AM
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In an effort to teach law students to “think like a lawyer” and develop their professional identities, attention has turned to helping students self-regulate th
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 6, 2:03 PM
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This study focuses on the automatic classification of European Union legislative documents according to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to monitor and improve government policies and legislation. This allows ex-ante checks durin
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 4, 5:40 PM
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psypost.org – “A recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences investigates how large language models, such as ChatGPT, influence people’s perceptions of political news headlines. The findings reveal that while these artificial intelligence systems can accurately flag false information, their fact-checking results do not consistently help users discern between true and false news. In some cases, the use of AI fact-checks even led to decreased trust in true headlines and increased belief in dubious ones. Large language models (LLMs), such as ChatGPT, are advanced artificial intelligence systems designed to process and generate human-like text. These models are trained on vast datasets that include books, articles, websites, and other forms of written communication. Through this training, they develop the ability to respond to a wide range of topics, mimic different writing styles, and perform tasks such as summarization, translation, and fact-checking. The motivation behind this study stems from the growing challenge of online misinformation, which undermines trust in institutions, fosters political polarization, and distorts public understanding of critical issues like climate change and public health. Social media platforms have become hotspots for the rapid spread of false or misleading information, often outpacing the ability of traditional fact-checking organizations to address it. LLMs, with their ability to analyze and respond to content quickly and at scale, have been proposed as a solution to this problem. However, while these models can provide factual corrections, little was known about how people interpret and react to their fact-checking efforts…”
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 19, 2024 3:38 AM
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This keynote, delivered at the Seoul AI-Law Symposium on November 3, 2023, explores the evolving intersection of artificial intelligence (AI) and law, focusi
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 18, 2024 2:45 AM
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Nouvelle diffusion Sur les réseaux sociaux, récemment, M. Mathieu Carpentier, Professeur de droit public (Université Toulouse Capitole), débattait en quelques mots du fait que de plus …
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Stéphane Cottin
December 12, 2024 3:09 PM
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Between artificial intelligence threatening to take our jobs and destroy the world while adopting the aesthetic of the weird and a presidential election that wi
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Rescooped by
Stéphane Cottin
from Droit électoral
December 11, 2024 12:15 PM
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Nouvelle diffusion Les médias se font l’écho à chaque élection de candidats recourant de nouveau à des grands véhicules avec des publicités électorales… alors que cette pratique est triplem…
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 11, 2024 9:08 AM
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This paper examines how developers of predictive analytics-a technology wherein artificial intelligence (AI) is being used to predict the future outcomes of leg
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 23, 4:21 PM
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In the pursuit of clarity in legal language, major strides have been made to simplify the use of legal terminology and make it more accessible. However, as the
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 21, 3:40 PM
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With the rise of (cleaned up) citations from practitioners and courts, Legal Writing Professors should continue to teach traditional legal citation rules for
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 21, 7:40 AM
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This chapter examines the evolving debate on AI legal personhood, emphasizing the role of path dependencies in shaping current trajectories and prospects. Two p
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 19, 1:51 AM
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This book provides insights into how AI is changing legal practice, government processes, and individuals’ access to those processes, encouraging each of us to consider how technological advances are changing the legal system. Particularly, and distinct from current debates on how to regulate AI, this books focuses on how the progressive merger between computational methods and legal rules changes the very structure and application of the law itself.We investigate how automation is changing the legal analysis, legal rulemaking, legal rule extraction, and application of legal rules and how this impacts individuals, policymakers, civil servants, and society at large. We show through many examples that a debate on how automation is changing the law is needed, which must revolve around the democratic legitimacy of the automation of legal processes, and be informed by the technical feasibility and tradeoffs of specific endeavors.
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 9, 4:31 PM
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This book offers a thorough analysis of the Amicus Curiae phenomenon, emphasizing its critical role in modern legal systems. The book reveals how these inter
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 9, 11:43 AM
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It has long been said that legislation ought to be knowable: accessible, comprehensible, and so forth. This is often described as an essential element of the ru
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 4, 5:41 PM
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Lifehacker: “Several sites, including Tumblr and Craigslist, have removed their RSS feeds. Other services, like TikTok, never offered an RSS feeds to begin with. This is annoying if you want to follow things without creating an account, the way you can with Bluesky and Mastodon. Even worse: there are even some news sites that don’t offer feeds, which is a problem if you’re setting up an RSS reader and hoping to follow your favorite sites. OpenRSS is a free service that builds open RSS feeds for various sites. Unlike similar services, this isn’t automated—the team there actively builds and maintains the integrations. The service is run by a nonprofit that is transparent about its financials right on the about page…”
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
January 4, 5:38 PM
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In a new post on the Inside Privacy blog, our colleagues discuss recent guidance from the attorneys general in Oregon and Connecticut interpreting their authority under their state comprehensive privacy statutes and related authorities. Specifically, the Oregon Attorney General’s guidance focuses...
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 18, 2024 2:49 AM
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During the past twenty years or so German courts have experienced a dramatic decline in cases (not only, but especially with regards<
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 16, 2024 2:46 AM
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Legal reasoning—“thinking like a lawyer”—is the fundamental skill taught and learned in law school, particularly in the first year of law school. For l
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 12, 2024 10:05 AM
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Exploring, analyzing, and interpreting law can be tedious and challenging, even for legal scholars, since legal texts contain domain-specific language, require knowledge of tacit legal concepts, and are sometimes intentionally ambiguous. In related, text-based domains, Visual Analytics (VA) and large language models (LLMs) have become essential for working with documents as they support data navigation, knowledge representation, and analytical reasoning. However, legal scholars must simultaneously manage hierarchical information sources, leverage implicit domain knowledge, and document complex reasoning processes, which are neither adequately accessible through existing VA designs nor sufficiently supported by current LLMs. To address the needs of legal scholars, we identify previously unexamined challenges and opportunities when applying VA to jurisprudence. We conducted semi-structured interviews with nine experts from the legal domain and found that they lacked the ability to articulate their tacit domain knowledge as explicit, machine-interpretable knowledge. Hence, we propose leveraging interactive visualization for this articulation, teaching the machine relevant semantic relationships between legal documents. These relationships inform the predictions of VA and LLMs, facilitating the navigation between the hierarchies of legal document collections. The enhanced navigation can uncover additional relevant legal documents, reinforcing the legal reasoning process by generating legal insights that reflect internalized, tacit domain knowledge. In summary, we provide a human-is-the-loop VA workflow for jurisprudence that recognizes tacit domain knowledge as essential for deriving legal insights. More broadly, we compare this workflow with related text-based research practices, revealing research gaps and guiding visualization researchers in knowledge-assisted VA for law and beyond.
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 11, 2024 12:13 PM
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Scooped by
Stéphane Cottin
December 11, 2024 8:43 AM
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This paper examines how developers of predictive analytics-a technology wherein artificial intelligence (AI) is being used to predict the future outcomes of leg
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