Vandenberg Village, CA Legal Research Tools, AI & ChatGPT
Legal Research In Vandenberg Village, CA
Traditional Legal Research Tools
I've been tracking free law resources on the web since the dawn of the internet. Here are the best resources that can give you free access to statutes, case law, procedures, and forms at the federal, state, and local levels.
Federal Law & Federal Courts
CaseText Library of Codes and Regulations: (LC Rating: 10 out of 10) This free directory "/library" is now a well-hidden, free, free (for now) resource. They offer the following resources
Justia: (LC Rating: 9 out of 10) Owned and operated by Tim Stanley, a pioneer of the "free law" movement, Tim has offered consumers free access to federal case law and statutes since the dawn of web browsers, first as the founder of FIndLaw, and then, for the past 20 years, as the owner and operator of Justia.
Codes and Regulations The 50-state collection "/library" is a fantastic repository of up-to-date, free (for now) state codes for every state, including California. It's the best resource out there, hands down, for primary law research.
Nolo: Nolo has been writing plain English summaries of consumer law since 1971. It's still is the best place for:
Summaries of California consumer law and procedure, on:
Municipal Codes: This excellent free website has codes for almost every major city and town.
Local Government Boards, Agencies and Districts
BallotOPedia: Find out who's on your local school board, and when your next local election is.
DemocracyByZipcode.com: ( aka LegalConsumer.com/democracy); Local information to help citizens stay involved in government at all levels and know how to communicate with those who represent them.
AI Tools & ChatGPT: Do They Work for Legal Research?
The Next Generation of “Access To Justice” Tools For Consumers: ChatGPT, Claude.ai, & Googe Bard
If you’ve read any news lately, you have heard about how generative AI tools like ChatGPT will change how America works.
So please don't trust any cases they claim to have found unless you're SURE they exist.
Some tools know their limits and are smart enough not to attempt an answer,
But some confidently assert absolute fiction and invent cases, judges, and statutes that don't exist!!
Suggested prompts for learning about law and procedure in your region:
We've tested and tweaked these prompts to get useful answers. You can learn what we've learned in using these tools. We'll give you tips on how to research different areas of law.
What a personal injury lawyer will want to know from you and why
Still Flawed, but Improving
This LLM (Large Language Model) technology is still new, and its capabilities have only recently hit a level where it's proving to be a genuinely useful tool. And the pace of improvement is increasing faster than most people had predicted. And they're not finished. It should be interesting.
As of this writing (July 2023), here are the three main tools we tested:
ChatGPT 4 is much better than ChatGPT 3.5 on questions about law and procedure.
ChatGPT is a powerful missile. You have to be careful where you aim it.
And you'll need to do some rudimentary checking of the answer it gives you.
It's not hard. We'll show you how.
What is ChatGPT?
We’ve all seen autocomplete as you type in a Google search; it guesses what you’re about to type, and often it’s right. ChatGPT is autocomplete, taken to an extreme, based on what it has learned by digesting “nodes” of information from browsing the internet.
So, ChatGPT is as intelligent (or as dumb) as the internet is. And it is nothing more than guessing the next word, next word, next word, based on everything it has read online.
Sometimes, it guesses the wrong next word, which can send it spiraling out of control, making up information that is not true as it blindly charges ahead with the next word, next word, next word, etc... They call these "hallucinations." They happen. You have to be on the lookout for them.
But overall, the chances are you'll get a good answer— or at least a very useful starting point for further research — from ChatGPT 4, especially if your question concerns a routine and known procedure.
ChatGPT Can Sound Confident And Be 100% Wrong!
You’ve probably heard stories of ChatGPT’s ability to “hallucinate” and say things confidently that are 100% wrong.
There was the famous casereported of an inept lawyer, inexperienced with ChatGPT, who foolishly relied on made-up case law without checking to see if the cases were real, and embarrassed himself and exposed himself to sanctions for citing case law that was complete fiction, invented by ChatGPT!
Don't be that guy!
We'll show you how to check your answers, which that lawyer could have done without much additional effort.
So.... take what ChatGPT gives you with a grain of salt and check the answer. We'll show you how.
How is ChatGPT when it comes to the law?
Just because it can occasionally be wrong, it would be very wrong to think that ChatGPT can be of no help and that you shouldn't use it.
Conversely,ChatGPT 4.0, (don't use 3.5) is right, far more often than wrong. And it's the quickest way to get a jumpstart on your legal research.
ChatGPT 4 scored very high on the LSAT and other measures of legal competence. (Do not use version 3.5 for legal research because the risk of incorrect information is too high. )
Local Info May Be Scant
The quality of the information on the internet determines the quality of the answer you get from ChatGPT. So, it stands to reason that questions about settled law concepts will likely be answered accurately.
The more local you go, the less information there is to survey on the web, so the answer is more likely to contain random (I.e., wrong) information or information that ChatGPT has made up.
For this reason, it’s a good idea to always ask for “citations” and “case law” for any local laws you are asking about. This way, you can look up those sources and see, first, if they exist, and second, if they stand for what they are cited for and whether they’ve been updated since 2021 (the date that most ChatGPT systems are based on)
(Note: There is a closed AI system offered for lawyers by CaseText that promises more accurate and complete results regarding the law.)
Check Sources
Recently, ChatGPT 4.0 will often give you a local link to a current website with more information about the local procedure or law you are asking about. Be sure to check it.
Note: Caude.ai will also give you links, but in our experience, only about 2% of their links are real. The rest go nowhere or are irrelevant content.
Google Bard, we've noticed, is quite good at providing useful, up-to-date links to local law and procedure, even in rural counties.
Google Bard has potential because it’s based on Google’s searching of the internet, and Google does a good job of finding accurate information. It's still working out some things.
One nice thing about Bard is its ability to answer questions about recent changes in law, such as announcements about new student loan repayment programs.
Microsoft Bing
The AI Chat works only with the Microsoft Edge browser. We haven’t tested it much, but we like that it gives you links to the websites on which it based its answer so that you can verify the information.
1. It's all about the prompts, about the prompts...
ChatGPT is only as smart as you prompt it to be.
If you ask a general question, you'll get a general answer.
If you ask a specific question, you'll get a specific answer.
But if you ask a specific question that it doesn't know, it may give you an answer anyway and it may well be wrong.
So it's important to ask questions that make sense and are in sufficient detail to get quality answers, and even then, you have to check them.
How you ask the question matters a lot. The more you phrase your question using legally precise terminology, the more likely you will get a good response.
2. Always ask for "citations," and be clear about whether you mean URLs or statutes, and then check to see if the citations are real
One tip is to ask for citations, which sometimes will give you just a URL to a website. If you want citations to California law or statutes, it's better to spell that out. If you want both, say so. more...
ChatGPT is a powerful tool, capable of giving consumers a wealth of useful information -- or a bunch of malarky if you don't use it carefully.
In this article, we'll share with you the prompts that work best for researching bankruptcy and debt and credit law and procedure that applies to Vandenberg Village, CA.
We can't guarantee you'll get accurate results, but we're pretty sure that if you copy and paste these prompts into ChatGPT 4.0, you'll get useful results to speed up your research.
The prompts are grouped by "use cases,"... that is, situations you might want to research.
ChatGPT 4.0 Prompts on Debt and Bankruptcy Law
Here's a starter set of prompts that we believe will yield useful results for your location.
We offer prompts about:
Foreclosure procedures in California
Processes for attachment or removal of liens from property, and the procedures for how to "perfect" a lien, and how to follow local procedures to look for defects in liens that may be on your property.
This article assumes you have read the articles on this site about the possible shortcomings of ChatGPT and how to check the responses that ChatGPT gives you. more...
We’ve assembled a starter set of prompts that will yield useful results for your location.
This article assumes you have read the articles on this site about the possible shortcomings of ChatGPT and how to check the responses that ChatGPT gives you.
It also assumes that you are paying the $20 monthly required to use ChatGPT 4.0. We do not recommend using the free version 3.5 for legal research because it is too unreliable. Version 4.0 is different and is still not perfect but 10X better.
In our experiments, these prompts yielded useful, correct responses in the vast majority of cases. And that’s worth a lot. And with some checking, you can improve those odds and learn if the law has been updated. Using ChatGPT, and checking its results with other online research tools, can make it a very reliable way to quickly learn about state and local inheritance laws and procedures. more...
The JusticeTech and Access to Justice tech fields are growing by leaps and bounds.
I've been involved in this effort since I graduated from law school 40 years ago. We we are now at a brink of a new age of access to justice with technology offering many opportunities to increase access to justice like never before.
We will try to keep this article up to date with the latest tools that we know of that are available to help people navigate the legal system.
Part of a LegalServices initiative to help self-helpers in every state gain access to automated forms and information that can help them handle their routine legal matters.
Even though Nolo is now owned by KKR hedge fund, it still manages to put out good books in the spirit of its founders, back in the 80s and 90s when I worked for this pioneering organization that led the development of self-help legal products in the USA.
This site has arisen from nowhere and now offers many do-it-your-self forms in all 50 states. In addition, they offer helpful articles and videos that explain simple non-contested procedural aspects of law. more...
At first, Google Bard seemed quite good when we asked it to find bankruptcy judges that have ruled in favor of student loan debtors in 'undue hardship' cases, it found quite a few. But once we started checking, we found that 4 out of every 5 cases were not real. (We have left the original Bard reports for illustration and formatted the incorrect information with Strikethrough formatting).
Why does the judge's name matter when asking about undue hardship cases?
Why did we ask the question this way? Because "undue hardship" is a concept like "negligence," each case involves a mix of law and fact.
In the federal courts, trial judges are given great deference in findings of fact. A determination that "undue hardship" exists is a finding of fact, assuming the correct legal standards are applied.
In such cases, the judge you have for your bankruptcy case has much to do with your likelihood of success as your facts; the judge must be inclined to rule in favor of people like you in undue hardship cases like yours. Not all judges are alike.
So, if you're considering attempting an undue hardship discharge and decide to file, check whether any bankruptcy judges in your district have ever ruled in favor of a student loan case.
We decided to try Google Bard to see if it could help. Here's what happened... more...
Legal Research Tools, AI & ChatGPT FAQ >
What is ChatGPT
ChatGPT (Chat Generative Pre-Trained Transformer) is autocomplete on steroids. Taken to its limits, which are still being tested. It was developed by an AI research company, Open AI
We've all seen autocomplete. ChatGPT is an extension of the logic used to autocomplete your google searches.
The "intelligence" in AI in ChatGPT is its ability to guess the next work, and the next word, and the next word... correctly.
And it's amazing how good the results are getting, especially with ChatGPT4.0
This "Large Language Model" (LLM) technology is a work in progress, but the progress is happening very fast, and this technology is changing how we process and access information about the word around us, including legal information.
This website has created this section to help you get the most out of ChatGPT with articles about:
Podcasts and articles about this rapidly changing technology and its potential for improving Access to Justice
Legal Research Tools, AI & ChatGPT FAQ >
Is ChatGPT Safe To Use For Legal Research?
It's an excellent place to start, but you'll need to check it.
ChatGPT can give you excellent information, logically presented, and it can be right often.
Unless it isn't, and sometimes it gets things confident but wrong.
So, ChatGPT, especially 4.0, is a GREAT tool for consumers to use when researching a DIY legal problem. But you can't rely on its answers without checking them.
So that means that...
It's all about the prompts...
It's all about the prompts and the follow-up research, but yes, ChatGPT is safe and VERY useful when used with the proper safeguards.
What it's good for and what it isn't
ChatGPT should NOT be viewed as a one-step solution to every problem.
ChatGPT SHOULD be viewed as a creative collaboration tool. Take the output it gives as a suggestion to get you thinking along the right lines and what to research next.
The best way to check if ChatGPT is making stuff up is to ask for citations and then check them on Google or your favorite search engine to see
If they exist and
stand for the principle that ChatGPT has cited.
ChatGPT 4.0 is only up to date through September 2021, and laws can and do change.
But mostly, laws don't change frequently, or at least not a lot.
So the answer you get will probably be close, and it will:
probably give you a good place to start learning about what you need to know and have to do to take care of the matter you are faced with, and
hopefully give you a vocabulary of names of procedures which you can then drill down and ask about, and
Link to websites that deal with the procedures that are mentioned.
Legal Research Tools, AI & ChatGPT FAQ >
Which AI Tool Should I Use For Legal Research?
Currently, the three main generative language AI tools out there are:
OpenAI's ChatGPT,
Google's Bard, and
Microsoft's Bing (which can only be used with the Microsoft Edge browser).
And there are others, like:
Claude.ai (a competitor of ChatGPT but not as powerful)
Of all these, version 4.0 of ChatGPT is my favorite for complete answers with a high probability of being right.
At least that's how it is, as of this writing, June 2023.
But each has its limits and strengths.
ChatGPT4 does not include content later than 2021, so its summaries of laws may be outdated as well as links.
So, for links to courthouse forms and such, Google Bard might yield more up to date information.
Claude.ai will try to answer questions others wont, but the answers are far too often made up nonsense citing statutes that don't exist and speaking of legal changes that never happened.
Bing with Edge browser has not been tried has been tried a bit. It offers links for each of its answers, so you can view its source material.
All of them make mistakes and, while they're getting better, they're not perfect.
So be prepared for that. Imagine if your spreadsheet was only 98% accurate. ChatGPT is kind of like that. Even being wrong 2% of the time can be a problem if it's some essential bit of information.
Use it accordingly.
Use it to very quickly create a first draft of your research, and go from there.