$1 million to whoever trusts an AI lawyer to represent their case before the U.S. Supreme Court
$1 million to whoever trusts an AI lawyer to represent their case before the U.S. Supreme Court
Joshua Browder, the founder of DoNotPay, announced that he is ready to pay a $1 million bonus to a lawyer or defendant at the U.S. Supreme Court who agrees to use the tips of his AI. But he would have to take a risk and do exactly as the AI said, and the outcome of the trial would depend on it. Browder himself has no doubts about the successful outcome, which is why he set such a generous reward.
This is a public experiment, the purpose of which is stated explicitly – to test the ability of AI to act as a lawyer in real time in the presence of real judges. What’s more, Browder wants to up the ante, so instead of just challenging traffic tickets, he’s aiming for a case before the U.S. Supreme Court. The risk is high, but it’s worth the gamble – if successful, DoNotPay’s AI has incredible possibilities.
It should be clear that this is not just Browder’s whim – on the contrary, almost all of the leading AI developers in the United States are behind the initiative. They want to show and prove that AI is able to overcome bureaucracy and bureaucratic arbitrariness, that AI can surpass humans in the area where traditionally there is maximum injustice to ordinary people. If AI surpasses professional lawyers in rhetoric and convinces judges that it is right, it will be a new milestone in the history of mankind.