Artificial Intelligence

Primary Sources

US Federal Law

United States Code
[KF62 2012 A2]
Available at SCLL

United States Code Annotated
[KF65 U5]
Available at SCLL, 2d, 3d, 5th

United States Code Service
[KF65 U8]
Available at SCLL, K

Title 15, Chapter 119, – National Artificial Intelligence Initiative

Secondary Sources

Manuals
Finding Aids/Indexes
  • Kānāwai Online public access catalog of the Hawai‘i State Law Library System
    • Keyword: Artificial Intelligence

Internet Resources

Education and Training

Click on the Zoom Recording Link to access the webinar recoding. Click on the Notes link to view a collection of helpful links and tools related to generative AI

Tools
  • ChatGPT
  • Claude
    • Claude is a next generation AI assistant built by Anthropic and trained to be safe, accurate, and secure to help you do your best work.
  • Courtroom5 AI for Pro Se (Self-Represented) Litigants
    • Courtroom5 AI is a generative AI tool designed specifically for the pro se or self-represented litigant. Use of this tool requires participation in a paid subscription plan.
  • Google Gemini
    • Google Gemini is a generative AI tool that uses information derived from other soruces to answer user prompts, including legal questions. A Google account is required to use Gemini.
  • Paxton Legal AI
    • Paxton Legal AI is a generative AI tool specifically developed for legal research and geared for practicing attorneys. Its underlying language model is trained on legal primary source materials and it provides automated assistance in legal research and document drafting. Paxton Legal AI offers a free, two week trial for new users.
  • Perplexity
    • Perplexity is a free AI-powered answer engine that provides accurate, trusted, and real-time answers to any question.
  • There’s An AI For That
    • There’s An AI For That is a website that includes a variety of topics, including a timeline of AI capabilities, the Job Impact Index, which shows the impact of AI on over 4,000 human jobs, as well as which AI tools are most suited to each job.
  • Is This Case Real?
    • This free online case checker helps determine whether a case citation is real or has been hallucinated by an AI. Please read all instructions and terms before using.
  • Hallucinated Case Tracker
    • This database tracks legal decisions in cases where generative AI produced hallucinated content – typically fake citations, but also other types of arguments. It does not track the (necessarily wider) universe of all fake citations or use of AI in court filings.
  • Court Orders Tracker
    • Tracking federal judge orders on artificial intelligence.
  • Duke University RAILS
    • The RAILS AI Use in Courts Tracker contains court orders, local rules, and guidelines from the U.S. and other countries. Each document is classified by its particular characteristics, and the tracker allows for search and filtering capabilities based on factors such as jurisdiction, date, and other key terms. The Tracker includes links to original source documents for further reference. You can also download raw data for your own analysis.
AI Usage Recommendations
  • Supreme Court Law Library’s AI Usage Recommendations
    • Caution: Generative AI tools are sophisticated and helpful, while at the same time we advise caution and to always verify results, especially related to any cited sources.
    • Do: Experiment and test out tools that are available to the public
    • Don’t: Rely on information as being 100% correct without verifying the results

Last updated: September 29, 2025