In a groundbreaking moment,India Archives AI successfully negotiated a contract with...AI.
There were no real stakes involved, since it was a just a live demo, but artificial intelligence company Luminance just provided a glimpse of what the future might look like for the legal industry. On Tuesday, the UK-based company's large language model (LLM) automated a contract negotiation "without human intervention, between two opposing parties." Luminance claims this is the first completely AI-powered contract negotiation. The model was trained on 150 million legal documents to gain legal knowledge.
Industry-specific LLMs are one of the latest evolutions from generalist models like ChatGPT. Expect to see more of these customized AI models cropping up.
On Monday, OpenAI announced custom GPTs, which allow the user to build and train a model for their own purposes without any coding experience needed. GPTs are marketed towards ChatGPT users, but also ChatGPT Enterprise customers who use a private version of ChatGPT internally.
The benefit of using a bespoke model is not only data privacy, but also focused expertise for companies looking to automate tasks. Luminance, which does this for legal contracts, is aiming to cut down on hours lawyers spend negotiating terms.
Reviewing legal documents is a time-consuming process for lawyers. LLMs like Luminance's proprietary legal-focused model, Autopilot, are able to understand and analyze massive amounts of information in a matter of seconds.
Automating the review of routine contracts like nondisclosure agreements could save legal professionals tons of time. "By putting the day-to-day negotiations in the hands of an AI that is legally trained and understands your business, we’re freeing lawyers up to focus their creativity where it counts," said Jaeger Glucina, Luminance chief of staff, in the announcement.
This doesn't mean there's zero oversight. According to CBNC's Ryan Browne, who saw the live demo, there's a live log highlighting changes to clauses and suggested changes, so lawyers can review the process and double-check it for errors.
Topics Artificial Intelligence
Monday: Me by Witold GombrowiczWatch: Dorothy Parker “Reads” by Sadie Stein'Fast X' ending explainer: What to expect from 'Fast and Furious 11''Succession' Season 4, episode 9 dropped a major clue about the finaleWhat We’re Loving: Gardens, Riches, and Kidneys by The Paris Review'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for May 20The Paris Review in Vice by Lorin SteinWhat We're Loving: Sundry Practices, New Order, Flower Power by The Paris ReviewBradbury, Trethewey, and an Android by The Paris Review50 Shades of Wednesday by The Paris ReviewReuniting with teachers on Twitter is so incredibly wholesomeRay Bradbury, 1920–2012 by The Paris ReviewSalinger Foods, Austen Portraits by The Paris ReviewTuesday: Me by Witold Gombrowicz'Succession' Season 4, episode 9 dropped a major clue about the finale'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for May 21The best memes from the 2020 Democratic National ConventionThe virtual DNC missed out on reaching young votersInventor breaks record for world's fastest electric ice cream vanWhat We're Loving: Sundry Practices, New Order, Flower Power by The Paris Review Instead of telling women who might get pregnant they can't drink, study suggests trusting them David Letterman and Michael Stipe are basically the same person and here's the proof Drop everything: Kate Middleton needs a new private secretary How to get free 'Hearthstone' cards during the 'Hearthstone' Global Games Patient shows brain activity for 10 minutes after death WikiLeaks says there's still a lot of CIA documents to come South Korea's president just got kicked out of office and people are pretty happy about it Wikileaks says it wants to help tech companies thwart CIA hacking Google's officially pitching a (new, expensive) tent in Mountain View Here's why Thor has a new haircut in 'Thor: Ragnarok' Looks like Matt Damon really could've grown potatoes on Mars Behold, the glory of our Trump White House LEGO set Google says it already fixed 'many' of the security flaws from Vault 7 leak 'Kong: Skull Island' review: The monster becomes a hero In China, you can hire someone to persuade mistresses into ending affairs Instant karma comes for driver skipping line of cars on the freeway This girl has her very own Batsignal built into her teeth Americans don't use bidets. This startup founder wants to change that. The ACLU is fighting police who want private info on a political Facebook group Chelsea Clinton horrified the internet with spinach pancakes
2.5456s , 8200.765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【India Archives】,Openness Information Network