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How to Fact-Check Legal Information AI Gives You

Fact-check legal information from AI by independently verifying any specific case names, statutes, or dates it cites using official legal databases like Google Scholar or your state bar's legal research tools. Start with the most consequential claims—the ones that would actually change your decision—rather than trying to verify every detail, which would defeat the purpose of using AI to save time.

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Why It Matters

AI tools have training data with cutoff dates, meaning they don't always know about recent legal changes. This is especially important for LGBTQ+ legal matters because relevant laws change frequently. Fact-checking AI research means developing a process to verify claims, catch outdated information, and confirm what's current before relying on it for real decisions.

Here's a practical fact-checking workflow: First, ask your AI tool directly about its knowledge limitations. When requesting legal information, ask: "What's your knowledge cutoff date? Are you aware of any recent changes to [state] name change laws in the past 12 months?" This primes the AI to acknowledge uncertainty if it has it. If the AI seems confident about something from, say, 2020, and you're in 2024, you need to verify independently.

Next, cross-reference with official sources. For name changes, that means your state court's official website or the court clerk's office directly. For healthcare law, check your state's medical board. These sources might be dense and hard to navigate, but they're authoritative. When you find conflicting information between AI and official sources, official sources win.

Create a simple verification checklist: (1) What specific claim am I checking? (2) What does the official source say? (3) When was that official information last updated? (4) What does AI say? (5) Are they aligned? (6) If not, which is more recent? Document your verification process so you remember what you checked and when. This matters if something changes later — you'll remember why you made a particular decision.

Pay special attention to things that are jurisdiction-specific and recently changed. Some states updated their name change procedures during 2021-2023. Older AI training data might not reflect this. When researching, look for official website update dates and ask AI: "Has [specific state] changed its name change procedure since [your best guess of when]?"

A misconception: if something shows up in multiple AI responses, it must be true. It's not. Multiple AI tools are trained on similar data, so they can propagate the same outdated information together. Official sources plus recent updates are what matter.

Try this: Choose one specific legal claim you need to verify (for example, "California requires publication of a name change in a newspaper"). Ask an AI tool for the claim, note the answer. Then search your state court's official name change webpage and the clerk's office FAQ. Document what each source says, including the date you checked official sources. Compare them. Note any discrepancies and which source you'll rely on.

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