The Volokh Conspiracy
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New Order on AI and Confidential Information from Court of International Trade Judge
Judge Stephen Alexander Vaden's Order on Artificial Intelligence, issued Thursday:
Parties must conform to many rules when they file briefs in a case before the Court of International Trade. For instance, briefs must state with particularity the grounds for seeking a desired order and make "the legal argument necessary to support it." USCIT Rule 7(b)(l)(B). They must follow certain requirements of form, including those that govern the use of captions, exhibits, and paragraphing. USCIT Rule 7(b)(2); USCIT Rule 10.
However, perhaps the most important of these rules are those that concern confidential or business proprietary information. The Court has taken special care to ensure that bringing a claim will not result in the disclosure of sensitive non-public information owned by any party before it. Accordingly, the Court requires that briefs containing confidential or business proprietary information "must identify that information by enclosing it in brackets," that parties must file a non-confidential version of such a brief and redact the bracketed information, and that recipients of the confidential brief may not disclose its contents to any party not authorized to receive such information. USCIT Rule 5(g). In particular, an attorney may only receive confidential or business proprietary information if he or she has filed a Business Proprietary Information Certification and received an order from the Court granting access to such information. USCIT Rule 73.2(c)(2).
Generative artificial intelligence programs that supply natural language answers to user prompts, such as ChatGPT or Google Bard, create novel risks to the security of confidential information. Users having "conversations" with these programs may include confidential information in their prompts, which in turn may result in the corporate owner of the program retaining access to the confidential information. Although the owners of generative artificial intelligence programs may make representations that they do not retain information supplied by users, their programs "learn" from every user conversation and cannot distinguish which conversations may contain confidential information. In recognition of this risk, corporations have prohibited their employees from using generative artificial intelligence programs. See, e.g., Samsung Bans Staff's AI Use After Spotting ChatGPT Data Leak, Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-05- 02/samsung-bans-chatgpt-and-other-generative-ai-use-by-staff-after-leak (last visited June 8, 2023).
Because generative artificial intelligence programs challenge the Court's ability to protect confidential and business proprietary information from access by unauthorized parties, it is hereby:
ORDERED that any submission in a case assigned to Judge Vaden that contains text drafted with the assistance of a generative artificial intelligence program on the basis of natural language prompts, including but not limited to ChatGPT and Google Bard, must be accompanied by:
- A disclosure notice that identifies the program used and the specific portions of text that have been so drafted;
- A certification that the use of such program has not resulted in the disclosure of any confidential or business proprietary information to any unauthorized party; and it is further
ORDERED that, following the filing of such notice, any party may file with the Court any motion provided for by statute or the Rules of the Court of International Trade seeking any relief the party believes the facts disclosed warrant.
Thanks to Jake Karr of the NYU Technology Law & Policy Clinic for the pointer.
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Among things occurring in the reality-based world these days, this is what interests the Volokh Conspiracy?
I guess all the Lexis-Nexis combing a law professor could manage today (so far) hasn’t been able to uncover any transgender sorority-Muslim-transgender parent-gay-lesbian-racial slur-transgender bathroom developments Prof. Volokh could mention for his fans.
I love reading your whinges. It warms me up knowing you're in such an emotionally aroused state.
Keep up the good work!
Pat Robertson is dead. Donald Trump appears to be "two down, two to go" with respect to indictments -- and evidence (texts, photographs, recordings, quotations, eyewitness accounts) from his employees, friends, and associates are damning him.
Jack Smith is a prosecutorial terminator. James Watt is dead. Ron DeSantis is advocating renaming military installations for southern bigots, traitors, and losers. The culture war continues to improve America in ways that drive right-wing bigots to delusion and desperation.
Trump is changing lawyers more frequently than he dyes that thing atop his head. Ted Kaczynski (patron saint of on-the-spectrum misfits) is dead. Ukraine says it has begun a new campaign against those Russian asswipes. Harvard, Yale, and Berkeley seem to be withstanding the challenge from Hillsdale, Grove City, Liberty, and Patrick Henry. Bigots are on the defensive in America, trying to hide behind euphemisms and carve out safe spaces. (When I was young, the bigots were out, loud, and proud.)
Good times!
From Wikipedia – Ted Kakzynsky considered gender transition, he was a distinguished tenure-track professor at Berkeley before resigning, and of course he was an environmentalist.
From the Wikipedia article on his manifesto:
“To Kirkpatrick Sale, the Unabomber was “a rational man” with reasonable beliefs about technology. He recommended the manifesto’s opening sentence for the forefront of American politics. Cynthia Ozick likened the work to an American Raskolnikov (of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment), as a “philosophical criminal of exceptional intelligence and humanitarian purpose … driven to commit murder out of an uncompromising idealism”….
“As of 2000, Industrial Society and Its Future remained on college reading lists and the green anarchist and eco-extremist movements came to hold Kaczynski’s writing in high regard, with the manifesto finding a niche audience among critics of technology, such as the speculative science fiction and anarcho-primitivist communities….
“In 2018, New York magazine stated that the manifesto generated later interest from neoconservatives, environmentalists, and anarcho-primitivists….”
One of yours, with the possible exception of the reference to neo-cons, your ideological cousins.
Maybe you should read the Wikipedia article about Kaczynski more carefully, like "rejecting leftism" in the first paragraph and a later paragraph about being anti-leftist:
(Wikipedia notes that the article is currently being heavily edited.)
I left in the part about conservatives so you could feel better about yourself, and maybe he was just crazy, but (except for hating technology) he'd fit right in here with the commenters ALK criticizes so regularly, and he very, very clearly was not of the left.
We know him from the friends he has made.
Except for the lame-ass “neoconservatives," he got his support from leftists. He couldn’t escape the principle that birds of a feather flock together, despite all his third-way rhetoric.
For example, I am (in a peaceful manner, and a non-sympathizing-with-terrorists manner) for a third way which rejects left-liberalism (progressives) and right-liberalism (conservatives) but many will refuse to respect my self-identification.
A terrorist insisting that he totally isn’t a leftist while for some strange reason he attracts mainly leftists, invites the proposition that he’s a leftist, since reality speaks more strongly than rhetoric.
Apply the duck test, even if the duck thinks it’s a weasel.
Good job covering for your mistake.
What mistake, genius?
Rather than look to a terrorist boasting about how original he is and how he’s too much of a genius to be classified, let’s look to who actually supported him.
“But, but – how can he be a leftist? Leftists never make vehement denunciations against each other!”
Still being defensive. You tortured a spotty amount of information to lay Kaczynski in the leftist camp, which he utterly rejected, while ignoring the more prominent information that he rejected them. The commenters on this site who are always calling for people to die or be killed? They're not leftists either.
“The commenters on this site" [etc., etc.]
Changing the subject already? That’s the sign that your main argument is fairly weak.
My main argument is complete and correct; Kaczynski was not of the left.
I reasonably theorized that your willful blindness about political affiliation might extend beyond the Unabomber. Apparently you just want to further demonstrate your inability to understand written words.
No, you switched subjects, which is perfectly normal behavior for someone who is confident in their position. /sarc
The subject originally was losers like you. You looked foolish when you dug deep to deny the obvious truth about Kaczynski's relationship to the left; you just look more foolish with your endless attempts to deny your own foolishness.
Arthur supposedly thinks that religion is mindless superstition. Why would he throw a reference to Muslims in there, other than because his opposition to religion is not sincere and it's only Christians and maybe Jews that he hates?
This blog uses cases involving Muslims to lather its intolerant, right-wing audience.
In that respect, Muslims resemble transgender sorority members, gays, drag queens, transgender parents, lesbians, etc. . . .
Except that in Muslims would kill those people if given an opportunity.
Bears with cameras would kill all of them, at least if they first happened upon a supply of cocaine.
So you're pretty much just going to have to cite ChatGPT in your briefs.
I wonder if they'll invent a special markup for this.
It wouldn't very hard to prompt engineer effective and case specific prompts without including any PII. Prompt Engineering is already paying upwards of $200/hr the lawyers can just bill it back to their clients.
Anyone who seeks to regulate AI must define AI. I see it as a continuum.
Spell Check
Grammar Check
Sentence Completion
Suggestions for improvement
Rewrite human text.
Humans rewrite AI text.
And it is not academic. Expect claims of "AI backed spell checker" to emerge soon. Expect, "AI enhanced keyboards" soon. Not to mention "AI speech-to-text typing assistant." Soon, it will be analogous to forbidding use of electricity to produce court documents.
I also see it as near impossible for a layman to certify that "no confidential or proprietary information" was disclosed. It would take pages of detailed regulations to clarify what that means.
Good points. It is foolish and impractical to try to comply with this order. I notice also that his link does not work because he inserted an extra space. And the article is paywalled.
Printing and scanning to create a PDF? This guy clearly knows his stuff when it comes to technology.
If I speak a racing tip to a parrot, and the parrot then repeats it after I've left the room, I haven't disclosed anything to the parrot. Under the court's theory, I've disclosed something to the parrot's owner, who might very well be in another city entirely while the parrot repeats the tip to some random ne'er-do-well who then cleans up at the track.
Its like leaving the plans to the nuclear sub in the WC. It might be negligent or reckless, but it's probably not (depending on statute drafting) unauthorized disclosure.
Mr. D.