India, Nov. 14 -- Over the last two years, it has been impossible to ignore the wave of generative AI tools hitting the market. Everywhere you turn, someone is testing ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini-drafting contracts, summarizing discovery sets, or exploring how AI might lighten workloads. For professionals in law, privacy, and compliance, the potential is tempting. Who wouldn't want to save time on tedious review or get a head start on regulatory reporting?

But alongside the buzz, there have been sobering reminders of the risks. A New York law firm was sanctioned after submitting a brief riddled with fake case citations generated by ChatGPT in Mata v. Avianca. Amazon abandoned its AI-powered hiring tool after it absorbed historical bias an...