Artificial intelligence ‘promising and problematic’ for courts, chief justice says
OTTAWA — Artificial intelligence is proving to be both promising and problematic for Canadian courtrooms, Chief Justice Richard Wagner said Tuesday.
Distinguishing fact from fiction has become more difficult — and more important — in a time when information can be generated and shared rapidly, Wagner said at his annual news conference.
Society is grappling with the emergence of machine learning and online tools that can process a wide range of data almost instantly, with varying degrees of accuracy.
Dozens of AI-generated hallucinations, such as fake case citations, have turned up in Canadian legal proceedings.


