
Welcome Automaters!
This might sound absolutely crazy but … people are walking into court with no lawyer, just a laptop… and winning.
Yep, welcome to 2025, where your public defender might just be ChatGPT.
Crazy, right? And here’s the twist — up until now, all we’ve heard are horror stories about AI making up fake cases and getting lawyers fined left and right. But this time? The narrative’s changing.
More and more people are turning to ChatGPT instead of lawyers — and some are actually winning their cases.
So today, we’re diving into AI’s role in the courtroom, how it’s being pulled off, and the massive ripple effect it might have on the legal world.
Here's what we have for you today
⚖️The Rise of the AI Lawyer: ChatGPT’s Biggest Legal Wins So Far

So, imagine this — you’re facing eviction, broke, scared, and your court-appointed lawyer just lost your case. What do you do?
Well, if you’re Lynn White from Long Beach, California, you don’t hire another lawyer… you hire ChatGPT.
Yep, that ChatGPT — the same one people use to write dating profiles and meal plans — is now helping folks win real legal battles.
Lynn couldn’t afford a new attorney, so she went all-in with AI. She fed ChatGPT her judge’s rulings, asked it to dig up case law, even had it help her write an appeal. And get this — she actually won.
She overturned her eviction notice and dodged more than $70,000 in penalties and rent.
Her words?
“It was like having God up there responding to my questions.”
Okay, dramatic — but also kind of iconic.
And Lynn’s not the only one.
There’s Richard Hoffmann, a 42-year-old New Yorker who used ChatGPT to strategize a civil case against his former employer. According to him the AI did in five days what would’ve taken lawyers months.
Now, AI companies will tell you not to rely on these tools for serious legal advice, but… the results are hard to ignore.
OpenAI’s GPT-4 literally passed the bar exam in 2023 with flying colors. A Stanford study found that 3 out of 4 lawyers plan to use AI in their practice.
Even court systems are getting in on it — Alaska is developing an AI assistant to help people represent themselves, and nonprofits like Public Counsel are holding workshops on how to do exactly what Lynn and Richard did — but smarter and safer.
But hey — before you grab your phone and type “ChatGPT, defend me in court,” here’s the twist:
AI still hallucinates. And not the fun kind.
Last month, a California attorney got slapped with a $10,000 fine after ChatGPT invented 21 fake legal citations.
Two lawyers for MyPillow’s Mike Lindell were fined $3,000 each for filing a brief full of imaginary cases.
A Thomson Reuters Institute study found dozens of similar incidents — from fabricated quotes to completely made-up cases.
In one wild example, a defendant in a dispute between a family and a school board submitted pleadings with 42 non-existent legal authorities.
I mean, you can’t make this stuff up — except, well… AI did.
So yeah — AI can help you win, but it can also make you look really dumb in front of a judge.
Still, love it or hate it, this moment feels like a turning point. A point where AI isn’t just changing how we write essays or emails anymore — it’s changing who gets to win in court.
If you ask me, it looks like the courtroom just got its first real tech upgrade. And it’s not a new gavel — it’s a chatbot.
So next time you hear someone say, “I’ll see you in court,” maybe ask them: “ Are you bringing a lawyer… or ChatGPT?”
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🦾 Inside Microsoft’s Massive AI Data Center Advantage Over OpenAI

OpenAI is out here talking about building a trillion-dollar empire of AI data centers, meanwhile, Satya Nadella just quietly dropped a tweet that basically said:
“Cute idea, Sam… but we’ve already got them.” 😏
This week, Nadella shared a video showing off Microsoft’s first massive AI system— or as Nvidia calls it, an AI “factory”.
Picture this: more than 4,600 Nvidia GB300 rack computers, each loaded with Blackwell Ultra GPUs — the shiny new chips everyone wants but nobody can get. All wired together by InfiniBand, Nvidia’s lightning-fast networking tech that’s basically the tech equivalent of strapping rocket engines to a server rack.
And here’s the kicker — Microsoft says this is just the first of many.
They’re planning to roll out hundreds of thousands of these GPUs across Azure’s 300+ data centers in 34 countries.
Translation? While OpenAI is still sketching blueprints, Microsoft’s already shipping hardware.
And timing-wise, it’s almost poetic. Just as OpenAI locks in fresh partnerships with Nvidia and AMD for its own AI campuses, Microsoft swoops in to remind the world — politely, of course — that it’s been the one hosting OpenAI’s models all along.
Microsoft’s message is subtle but loud:
They’re not chasing the AI frontier — they built the road to it. And they’re not just ready for frontier AI; they’re already running it.
We’ll probably hear more soon. CTO Kevin Scott is set to speak at TechCrunch Disrupt later this month, and something tells me he’s bringing receipts.
In the meantime, go see how this move might just reshape the AI race — right here.
🧱 Around The AI Block
🤖 Meet Amazon Quick Suite: The agentic AI application reshaping how work gets done.
💼 Google ramps up its ‘AI in the workplace’ ambitions with Gemini Enterprise.
👮♂️ Police issue warning over AI home invasion prank.
🦾 Intel unveils new processor powered by its 18A semiconductor tech.
🤝 Figma partners with Google to add Gemini AI to its design platform.
🖼️ OneDrive is getting a new Windows app and an AI photo agent.
⚔️ How the new AI arms race changing the war in Ukraine.
💃 More affordable ChatGPT Go is now available in 18 countries.
💻 The Browser Company’s Dia is now available on Mac, no invite needed.
🥳 Sora hit 1M downloads faster than ChatGPT.
🦾 India pilots AI chatbot-led e-commerce with ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude in the mix.
🛠️ Trending Tools
Photoroom erases image backgrounds for free and replaces it with different backgrounds of your choosing.
Reply helps you create 100% human-like emails in seconds while focusing on personalization.
Joia Workspace is a new tool that gives you access to most major chat models (GPT-4o, Claude, Llama) in one team workspace for a fraction of ChatGPT's cost ($9/user/month).
Remento turns spoken stories and memories into a printed memoir with QR codes to hear later.
Icebreakers.wiki generates fun ice-breaker questions for teams and group discussions (also perfect for party games).
🤖 ChatGPT Prompt Of The Day: The Ultimate Writer’s Combo
If you’ve ever dreamed of writing a book but didn’t know where to start—or worried AI might flatten your voice into generic mush—today’s GPT duo is about to change that.
Meet Book Creator Guide and Voice/Style/Tone AI Prompt Snippet Generator—two powerhouse GPTs ready to tag-team your writing dreams into reality.
✨ Why they’re awesome:
Book Creator Guide: Your full-service book-writing assistant. It helps you pick a topic, structure chapters, conduct web research, and even generate images for your story or proposal. Whether you’re outlining your first novel or polishing a nonfiction concept, this GPT’s got the playbook.
Voice/Style/Tone Generator: Because your voice matters. This GPT analyzes text, or even docs, to craft prompt snippets that perfectly capture your tone and writing style—so every paragraph still sounds uniquely you.
⚡ How to use them together:
Start with Book Creator Guide to brainstorm, outline, and draft your chapters. Once you’ve got your foundation, drop a sample of your writing into Voice/Style/Tone Snippet Generator to create a prompt snippet that locks in your personal style. Then, use that snippet as you keep writing—your voice stays consistent, your tone stays authentic, and your story flows naturally.
Don't forget: Use them side by side: one builds your story, the other keeps your voice intact.
💡 Prompt to try:
For Book Creator Guide:
“Help me outline a non-fiction book about creativity for entrepreneurs. Generate a structure with chapters, key points, and title ideas.”
For Voice/Style/Tone Generator:
“Analyze the writing tone and style of this sample paragraph and create a prompt snippet I can use to match it in future drafts.”
Upgrade now to see this whole month’s prompt videos and more, or buy TODAY’S WOD for just $1.99
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