LLM vs LLB: the case for junior lawyers is undermined by AI - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

LLM vs LLB: the case for junior lawyers is undermined by AI

Artificial intelligence will require its own rule book — a fundamental role for humans to undertake

They consume vast tracts of content, cost a packet to train and graft well past normal office hours. Junior lawyers have much in common with generative artificial intelligence. Galling, then, for the former to face pay stasis — Slaughter and May is freezing their salaries at £150,000 for now — while more spending is being thrown at AI.

Expect the machines to continue shouldering more of the workload. Fusty image notwithstanding, lawyers have been deploying tech for nearly a century: dictaphones in the 1950s and two decades later the clunky red UBIQ that enabled case law search without recourse to libraries.

Today tech is corralled to zip through documents, conduct due diligence, summarise cases and even draft simple ones. It can handle matters like conveyancing or litigation; one of England’s newest law firms uses AI to prepare “polite” debt chasing letters for just £2.

Nor is it all just grunt work. LexisNexis’s Lex Machina — no relation to this column — helps predict the outcome of litigation cases based on past behaviour of courts, counsel and judges. A&O Shearman’s antitrust AI tool works out which jurisdictions require regulatory filings to be lodged and what information they will need before drafting the necessary requests for any missing data.

A few years down the line all this may look as laughably quaint as the Dictaphone. AI boosters see it plugging gaps in the constitution, highlighting potential legal action — think well-informed ambulance chasers alerting you to a breach of copyright, say — or even acting as judge. Parties input their grievances, the model spits out a resolution.

For now, the case for junior lawyers remains. Finances stack up. Hourly billing rates vary hugely, but assume £600-£700 at a magic circle firm. Applying the lower end to 1,500 billable hours leaves several times their salary to be tipped into the partners’ pot.

Today’s juniors are also tomorrow’s seniors: succession planning relies on an intake of young blood. Algo-generated reports still need human oversight; that usually entails at least some degree of amending too. The Panglossian view on AI applies in law too: if it is easier to launch cases, more people will do so, thus expanding the pie.

But there’s a more fundamental role for humans. AI, with tentacles in every sphere of business and society, requires its own rule book. That is a massive undertaking, spanning ethics, intellectual property, privacy and much else besides. Budding legal bigwigs still have a case.

louise.lucas@ft.com

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

梅西、姆巴佩与足坛不朽之争

世界杯开赛之初,顶级球员火力全开、进球如潮,但人们争夺的最高荣誉并非金靴奖。

苹果拟向被列入黑名单的中国公司采购内存芯片

这家iPhone制造商希望特朗普政府批准其采购计划,以缓解芯片价格上涨带来的压力。

一周新闻小测:2026年6月27日

您对本周的全球重大新闻了解如何?来做个小测试吧!

莫斯科初次体验普京发动的战争

乌克兰无人机首次逼使俄罗斯首都居民紧急躲避。

大众汽车在大规模削减成本行动中计划裁员多达10万人

此番重组紧随将船用发动机部门出售给美国私募股权公司贝恩这一重磅交易之后。

中国车企借道墨西哥和加拿大“叩响美国大门”

北京补贴的车辆正成为北美贸易关系中的焦点争议。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×