Contract analysis: Difference between revisions

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{{a|devil|<nowiki>{{Subtable|</nowiki>
[[File:Zen.jpg|450px|thumb|center|Sir! Sir! I've found an [[indemnity]]!]]
<nowiki>[[File:Zen.jpg|450px|frameless|center|}}“Sir! Sir! I've found an </nowiki>[[indemnity]]<nowiki>!”}}</nowiki>
}}Luminaries, [[thought leader]]s and [[digital prophet]]s will tell you that machines can now read and annotate contracts, such that yon poor [[legal eagles]] are no longer needed and will shortly have no choice but to work as [[technological unemployment|pleasure droids]] for our transistor-based overlords. Quoth one such [[digital prophet]]:
}}Luminaries, [[thought leader]]s and [[digital prophet]]s will tell you that machines can now read and annotate contracts, such that yon poor [[legal eagles]] are no longer needed and will shortly have no choice but to work as [[technological unemployment|pleasure droids]] for our transistor-based overlords.  
 
Quoth one such [[digital prophet]]:


:''... machines are also increasingly encroaching on tasks that, until now, have required a human ability to think and reason. In the legal sphere, for example, J. P. Morgan has developed a system that reviews commercial [[loan|loan agreements]]. It does in a few seconds what would have required, they estimate, about 360,000 hours of human lawyer time.''
:''... machines are also increasingly encroaching on tasks that, until now, have required a human ability to think and reason. In the legal sphere, for example, J. P. Morgan has developed a system that reviews commercial [[loan|loan agreements]]. It does in a few seconds what would have required, they estimate, about 360,000 hours of human lawyer time.''