Anthropic trying to make you fire your lawyer - link
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Poast new message in this thread
Date: March 19th, 2026 6:05 PM
Author: ,.,,.,.,,,,,,.....................
https://x.com/heynavtoor/status/2034589243914465789
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5847693&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5310443#49756420) |
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Date: March 19th, 2026 6:38 PM Author: TurboGrafx-67
Asked my Claude prompt engineering expert to review the X post and every prompt he shared, to see if we can extract anything useful:
"No.
This is engagement-farm slop. The replies are more useful than the prompts — the commenters (Tom Martell, @ImmutableLawyer, @aniaacw, @OneManSaas) are all saying what you already know.
The prompts themselves are single-shot, zero-infrastructure, no-guardrail templates with these specific failures:
Persona inflation is the whole trick, and it’s the wrong trick. “You are a senior corporate attorney at Skadden Arps” does nothing useful. The firm name doesn’t change the model’s legal knowledge — it just inflates confidence and suppresses hedging, which is the opposite of what you want for legal output. Your Gem suite uses grounded role framing (“You draft discovery requests for a California PI plaintiff firm”) tied to actual jurisdiction, practice area, and output constraints. That’s the difference between a persona that anchors behavior and one that just sounds impressive.
No verification layer, no placeholder protocol, no QC. Every one of these prompts asks for “ready-to-sign” output. Your entire architecture is built around the opposite principle — [NEED] markers, [CITE CHECK] placeholders, mandatory Gem 6 QC pass, human verification of all arithmetic. These prompts actively encourage the user to skip the step that matters most.
No jurisdiction pinning. The prompts say things like “state-specific enforceability” for non-competes but never force the model to ask which state. California bans most non-competes entirely (Bus. & Prof. Code § 16600). A “ready-to-sign” employment agreement with a non-compete clause drafted for a California employee is malpractice-grade output.
No hallucination controls. No citation verification, no confidence flagging, no instruction to say “I don’t know” when the model is uncertain about a legal standard. These prompts are optimized to produce confident-sounding output, not correct output.
Zero platform optimization. Every prompt is the same wall-of-text format regardless of target model. No thinking budget management, no verbosity control, no structural formatting matched to the platform.
The one commenter who nailed it: Tom Martell — “Claude is the best junior associate I’ve ever had but you don’t have to sensationalize the use case.” That’s the right frame. Your infrastructure already treats AI as a junior associate with mandatory supervision. These prompts treat it as a replacement for the supervising attorney. Nothing to extract here.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5847693&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5310443#49756514)
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Date: March 19th, 2026 6:06 PM
Author: ,.,,.,.,,,,,,.....................
Bet the company prompts.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5847693&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5310443#49756422) |
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Date: March 20th, 2026 9:38 AM Author: .- .-. . .-. . .--. - .. .-.. .
No GC is paying biglaw rates for a demand letter -- not even associate rates. Maybe some billionaire tard with no in-house attorneys on payroll somewhere is stupid enough to do this but that's about the only kind of tard who would. Demand letters are churned out by slave labor in literal India. Your cost savings is the $20 you would pay you OPS folks in India for this. Maybe the Philippines if youre JPMorgan....
People pay lawyers because the lawyer has done the same deal 500x and knows from heart what needs to be papered, what points can be ignored and what you need to actually fight about and then the lawyer gets on the phone and does the fighting so the rich guy paying him can go do something else because nobody with a billion bucks is going to waste even 30 seconds thinking about work product language and survivability provisions in some independent contractor agreement. The drafting BS is not why the lawyer is on payroll. Everyone has form docs. Everything was papered 50 years ago if not 100 years ago. The bar association has practice guides with forms you can buy for a couple hundred bucks with everything you could want. Those practice guides and about 20 years of actually using them will make you an actually decent lawyer.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5847693&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5310443#49757037)
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Date: March 20th, 2026 4:02 PM
Author: ........,,,,,,......,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,
This is hilarious. "It can write NDAs" - okay - so it can do what a paralegal doesn't even bother to review half of the time?
"It can write freelance agreements."
So can I in 3 minutes. Does it know enough to ask basic questions like "who owns the deliverables", if expenses are paid, when it can be terminated?
It might actually do that - but you can see how if you go one level deeper on these agreements, idiots are still going to one to ask their lawyer one this stuff means.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5847693&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5310443#49758120) |
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