Stanford Law Study
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
AI Outperforms Law Professors in Stanford Law Study
A groundbreaking study led by Stanford Law School Professor Julian Nyarko reveals that law professors overwhelmingly prefer AI-generated answers to student questions over responses written by their fellow instructors—a finding that could reshape how legal education is delivered. The study, titled “Law Professors Prefer AI Over Peer Answers,” was conducted with 16 law professors across U.S. law schools and tested whether large language models could serve as effective tutors for contract law...
Study reveals deception and confusion in bankruptcy filings
Study reveals deception and confusion in bankruptcy filings Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Accounting is usually associated with corporations. "In accounting, we traditionally think more about the firm and less about the household," says Fabian Nagel, an assistant professor of accounting at Stanford Graduate School of Business. That perspective has shifted as it's become easier to study ordinary people's finances.
CS336: Language Modeling from Scratch
Course Staff Logistics - Lectures: Monday/Wednesday 3:00-4:20pm in Skilling Auditorium - Recordings: YouTube playlist - Office hours: - Percy Liang: Fridays 11am-12pm in Gates 366 - Tatsu Hashimoto: Tuesdays 11-12am in Gates 364 - Marcel Rød: Tuesdays 4:30-5:30pm in Gates 498, Wednesdays 4:30-5:30pm in Gates 415 - Herman Brunborg: Wednesdays 1:30-2:30pm, Fridays 1:30-2:30pm, location Gates 392 - Steven Cao: Mondays 4:30-5:30pm, Thursdays 9:30-10:30am, Gates 200 - Contact: Students should ask...
Trump admin’s cancellation of wind energy projects causes business turmoil
Trump admin’s cancellation of wind energy projects causes business turmoil Seven northeastern states have sued US gov’t for paying TotalEnergies to withdraw from offshore wind projects. French energy giant TotalEnergies is embroiled in a lawsuit between seven US states and the federal government as the administration of President Donald Trump upends domestic energy policy, shutting down some wind energy projects while pushing fossil fuels. It has also raised questions about the...
OpenAI and Anthropic Sign Letter to Prevent AI-Developed Biological Weapons
The CEOs of several major artificial intelligence companies are urging members of Congress to adopt new laws that would make it harder for bad actors to develop biological weapons using their technology. Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, OpenAI’s Sam Altman, Anthropic’s Dario Amodei, and Microsoft AI’s Mustafa Suleyman are among the signatories on a public letter calling for laws requiring companies that sell synthetic DNA and RNA to screen customers and orders to prevent the misuse of...
UK media fails to disclose defence sector links in nearly 60% of cases
Executive summary This report reveals how retired senior British military figures are frequently presented in the UK media as purely independent experts on defence and security matters without mention of their personal commercial and employment interests in the defence, technology, intelligence, and security sectors in those reports. By analysing media reports between 2015 and May 2026, AOAV identified a repeated pattern where almost 60% of former key military personnel with links to the...
Actually, the SAT Was Necessary After All
Zvezdelina Stankova has taught mathematics at UC Berkeley for nearly three decades. But in 2023, while teaching introductory calculus for the first time since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, she noticed that something was quite wrong. The bottom 25 percent of students were not just struggling with the coursework, Stankova told me; “people were in freefall.”