Daily LInks
1. Judges in England and Wales are given cautious approval to use AI in writing legal opinions. The Courts and Tribunals Judiciary last month said AI could help write opinions but stressed it shouldn’t be used for research or legal analyses because the technology can fabricate information and provide misleading, inaccurate and biased information. – Read More on ABC
2. RELATED READ: Indian Court Says No ChatGPT Use in Louboutin Trademark Lawsuit. Given that the accuracy and reliability of AI-generated data is still in a “grey area,” the court stated that “AI cannot substitute either the human intelligence or the humane element in the adjudicatory process.” – Read More on TFL
3. More People Are Selling Their Old Clothes Online. Governments Want Their Cut. British tax collectors are the latest to seek a share of the boom in secondhand fashion, forcing online marketplaces to hand over more details of customer transactions. – Read More on the WSJ
4. 2023: A Strange, Tumultuous Year in Sustainability. Three themes in sustainability from 2023 that really dwarf other stories: the anti-ESG movement, China’s acceleration of a clean economy, and the rise of reporting regulations. – Read More on HBR
5. From hallucinations to clarity? The potential – and pitfalls – of using AI in ESG reporting. There is no consensus on the metrics that are used to demonstrate progress, nor a standard approach to measurement. Indeed, some frameworks require a quarterly metric, while others require measurement annually. – Read More on Reuters
6. How AI companies are trying to solve the LLM hallucination problem. Vectara has seen a big demand from companies who need help building a chatbot or other question-and-answer style systems, but can’t spend months or millions tweaking its own model. – Read More on Fast Co.