Tag Archives: Henry Lebowitz

Does Your Company Need a ChatGPT Pilot Program? Probably.

by , , and

Photos of the authors

Top row from left to right: Megan Bannigan, Avi Gesser, Henry Lebowitz, and Benjamin Leb
Bottom row from left to right: Jarrett Lewis, Melissa Muse, Michael R. Roberts, and Lex Gaillard
(Photos courtesy of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP)

Last month, we wrote about how many companies probably need a policy for Generative AI tools like ChatGPT, Bard and Claude (which we collectively refer to as “ChatGPT”). We discussed how employees were using ChatGPT for work (e.g., for fact-checking, first drafts, editing documents, generating ideas and coding) and the various risks of allowing all employees at a company to use ChatGPT without any restrictions (e.g., quality control, contractual, privacy, consumer protection, intellectual property, and vendor management risks). We then provided some suggestions for ways that companies could reduce these risks, including having a ChatGPT policy that organizes ChatGPT use cases into three categories: (1) uses that are prohibited; (2) uses that are permitted with some restrictions, such as labeling, training, and monitoring; and (3) uses that are generally permitted without any restrictions.

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Does Your Company Need a ChatGPT Policy? Probably.

by Megan Bannigan, Avi Gesser, Henry Lebowitz, Anna Gressel, Michael R. Roberts, Melissa Muse, Benjamin Leb, Jarrett Lewis, Lex Gaillard, and ChatGPT

Photos of the authors

Top row left to right: Megan Bannigan, Avi Gesser, Henry Lebowitz, and Anna Gressel
Bottom row left to right: Michael R. Roberts, Melissa Muse, Benjamin Leb, and Jarrett Lewis

ChatGPT is an AI language model developed by OpenAI that was released to the public in November 2022 and already has millions of users. While most people were initially using the publicly available version of ChatGPT for personal tasks (e.g., generating recipes, poems, workout routines, etc.) many have started to use it for work-related projects. In this Debevoise Data Blog post, we discuss how people are using ChatGPT at their jobs, what are the associated risks, and what policies companies should consider implementing to reduce those risks.

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Fifteen Ways to Reduce Regulatory and Reputational Risks for Your AI-Powered Applications – Lessons from Recent Court Decisions and Regulatory Activity

by Avi Gesser, Henry Lebowitz, Jeffrey P. Cunard, Jim Pastore, Lisa Zornberg, Luke Dembosky, Anna R. Gressel, and Steve Tegrar

It is only February, but, so far, 2020 looks like it is going to be the year that courts and regulators look seriously at artificial intelligence (“AI”).

Recent developments in both Europe and the United States provide some insight into where AI is likely to face tough scrutiny and ways to mitigate risks of using AI. Continue reading