The phrase "AI and Law" represents the most significant shift in jurisprudence since the internet. In India, this is not theoretical. The Supreme Court of India has actively started using AI tools (like SUVAS) for translating judgments into regional languages, making justice more accessible.
The phrase "AI and Law" represents the most significant shift in jurisprudence since the internet. In India, this is not theoretical. The Supreme Court of India has actively started using AI tools (like SUVAS) for translating judgments into regional languages, making justice more accessible.
AI in the Courtroom
While we are far from "AI Judges," technology is assisting the judiciary in:
- Docket Management: Algorithms helping registries sort and cluster cases to reduce pendency.
- Live Transcription: AI speech-to-text tools capturing arguments in real-time.
AI for Law Firms
For practitioners, artificial intelligence and law merge in tools that predict case outcomes, analyze judge behavior, and automate due diligence. This "predictive justice" capability helps lawyers set realistic client expectations.
The Ethical Questions
As AI in law firms grows, so do the questions:
- Bias: If an AI is trained on historical data, will it repeat historical biases against certain groups?
- Liability: If an AI legal tool makes a mistake in a contract, who is liable? The lawyer or the software provider?
- Hallucinations: Generative AI can invent cases (as seen in global news). Verification remains the human lawyer's core duty.
Conclusion
AI and Law are now inseparable. For the Indian legal community, the path forward is "Responsible AI"—using these powerful tools to increase efficiency and access to justice, while maintaining the human oversight that ensures fairness.
