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Thank the Gods You Don’t Attend UC Berkeley Law (Or, Sorry If You Do!)
Berkeley Law parties… er, teaches, like it’s 1989.
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Announcing HendersonBot
I for one welcome our robot doppelgangers.
categories: academia, adjudication, artificial intelligence, criminal law, crimprof blog, investigation, law school, scholarship, slider, teaching, technology
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The Right Way to Decide Chatrie – (Or, Let’s Be Reasonable About Geofence Warrants, Part 6)
The Supremes can do some good—and not embarrass the future—by rejecting extremes and reinforcing the constitutional magistrate role.
categories: cases of interest, constitution, crimprof blog, fourth amendment, investigation, privacy, slider, supreme court, technology
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An Introduction to (Legal) Generative AI
What is this stuff, anyway, and how’s it fit into law school and lawyering?
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Why Are Humans So Prone to Anti-AI Speciesism?
If it walks like a duck and talks like a duck… oh, not us!
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Let’s Be Reasonable About Geofence Warrants (Part 5) – New Jersey v. Bryant
The NJ Superior Court’s Appellate Division takes a measured (if less than ideal) approach to cell tower dumps, and this time in a published opinion.
categories: cases of interest, constitution, crimprof blog, fourth amendment, investigation, privacy, scholarship, slider, technology
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Rehabilitating Einstein – What Quantum Discomfort Can Teach the Criminal Law
When even quantum scientists aren’t sure… what can the criminal law learn but humility?
categories: artificial intelligence, books, criminal law, crimprof blog, scholarship, slider, technology
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All the Wrong Questions (Part 3) – Normative Opacity in the Age of Strong AI
As we achieve more intelligent machines… are there things about criminal justice that we ought to refuse to allow anyone to learn?
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All the Wrong Questions (Part 2) – An Honest Verdict
The potential for substituting in truly intelligent machines makes me wonder… why do we ask juries the questions we do?
Tags: grand jury
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All the Wrong Questions – Criminal Adjudication in the Age of Strong AI
The potential for substituting in truly intelligent machines makes me wonder… are we doing this wrong?
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Let’s Be Reasonable About Geofence Warrants (Part 4) – Ohio v. Diaw
The Ohio Supreme Court reasonably holds a person retains no reasonable expectation of privacy in a single location datum conveyed to a third party.
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No More Chest Thumping in Iowa – A Garbage Search About-Face
Iowa proves a legal realist’s dream (and privacy failure) in narrowing its state constitutional search protection.
categories: cases of interest, constitution, crimprof blog, fourth amendment, jurisprudence, privacy, slider, technology
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No, Chief, Do Not Consider Banning AI
Intelligence (human or machine) weeps at the ignorance of “banning the use of artificial intelligence in legal proceedings.”
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Let’s Be Reasonable About Geofence Warrants (Part 2) – US v. Chatrie
Eight concurrences and no majority is not getting the job done.
categories: bench and bar, cases of interest, crimprof blog, fourth amendment, jurisprudence, privacy, slider, technology
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Let’s Be Reasonable About Geofence Warrants
I appreciate the Fifth Circuit attention—and stand by that work—but a categorical ban is not reasonable.
categories: cases of interest, constitution, crimprof blog, fourth amendment, privacy, slider, technology
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Classroom Generative AI Hallucinations
When class discussion goes AI-rogue.
categories: artificial intelligence, crimprof blog, homicide, law school, slider, teaching, technology
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Carpenter AI-Generated Podcast
Google’s NotebookLM generates a podcast concerning the Carpenter decision.