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Showing posts with the label EDRM - Electronic Discovery Reference Model

Your Policy, Your Problem: Company Policies Often Define the Limits of Employee Privacy

As remote and hybrid work models have become the norm, the line between personal and professional digital life has blurred almost beyond recognition. Employees routinely use company-issued laptops and cell phones for personal activities, while employers increasingly rely on those same devices to investigate misconduct, prosecute or defend litigation, and preserve electronically stored information. At the center of this tension lies a deceptively simple question: who controls the employee’s personal data on the employer-owned devices? The importance of a clear resolution of the question of what may be private on a cell phone is difficult to overstate. For example: Mobile application software on a cell phone, or “apps,” offer a range of tools for managing detailed information about all aspects of a person’s life. There are apps for Democratic Party news and Republican Party news; apps for alcohol, drug, and gambling addictions; apps for sharing prayer requests; apps for tracking pregnan...

Hallucinations, Drift, and Privilege: Three Comic Lessons in Using AI for Law

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Image: Ralph Losey with AI. [ EDRM Editor’s Note: EDRM is proud to publish Ralph Losey’s advocacy and analysis. The opinions and positions are Ralph Losey’s copyrighted work. All images in the article are by Ralph Losey using AI. This article is published here with permission.] Artificial intelligence has moved from novelty to necessity in law. It now drafts briefs, reviews discovery, and even suggests courtroom arguments. But most lawyers still struggle to use it wisely. Instead of another citation-heavy lecture or dour ethics outline, I’ve chosen a different method: comedy. These three skits are not abstract hypotheticals—they’re exaggerated but recognizable scenes where a lawyer leans on a “helpful” robot and things start to wobble. Robot Laurel and human Hardy telling jokes. All images and videos by Ralph Losey using AI.  Click for YouTube video. Here’s the twist: the comedy wasn’t mine. It came from GPT-5, the latest large language model whose humor engine is far better than i...