Incredible that the common people will be able to wrestle the right to rule of law away from the bloated legal caste, who have built themselves quite the moat.
The inaccessibility of justice is a huge driver of inequality. Any tools which bridge this gap will help make a more just society.
The profession is walking into a court room 90 minutes late because you know the judge's work pattern then going "hey Mike, how are the kids" after 22 years in the same jurisdiction. Then they old boys haggle based on how much the lawyer is charging. You are basically paying for access to the social club. Better outcomes when part of the in-group of course.
Would like to plot attitudes to AI against parental incomes or inheritance. If your value derives from having contacts and access to gatekept materials, rather than pure technical expertise, you've got a lot to lose as the walls come crumbling down.
There was another thread about the impact of AI on maths, and one of the arguments was about peer review... Made me wonder whether the writer was more concerned about the established order and gates being upset, or whether there's actually a valid technical criticism.