Reason Magazine
•79% Informative
Authors: Textualists credit the ordinary meaning of the language of law because such meaning can be discerned by determinate, transparent methods.
Authors: Judges who ask parties and public to take their subjective word for it are not engaged in transparent textual analysis.
Authors say "landscaping" is a common term used to describe type of work involved in the installation of in-ground trampolines.
In Snell , the queries themselves didn't ask for the "datapoints" or "probabilistic maps" that Judge Newsom said he was looking for.
They asked for bare conclusions about "the ordinary meaning of 'landscaping'" and whether "installing an in-ground trampoline" "is landscaping" The chatbot's conclusions gloss over underlying questions of legal theory.
VR Score
90
Informative language
95
Neutral language
46
Article tone
informal
Language
English
Language complexity
57
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
long-living
External references
5
Source diversity
4