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To AI-Proof Lawyers, Some Law Schools Restrict Technology | by Kathryn Palmer | July 14, 2026 | Inside Higher Ed
Last week, the University of Chicago Law School announced a ban on laptops, tablets and phones in the classroom. The goal is to help students develop critical oral argument skills, which AI likely won’t take over from human lawyers any time soon.
Even as the legal profession embraces generative artificial intelligence, some of the nation’s top law schools are restricting its use.
In May, the law school at the University of California, Berkeley, announced that effective this summer, students are by default prohibited from using AI in “conceptualizing, outlining, drafting, revising, translating, or editing any work submitted for credit” to ensure “the best legal education possible for our students by equipping them to perform activities constitutive of excellent lawyering.” Last month, the dean of the law school at the University of Texas at Austin called on faculty to “make extensive use of classroom time to engage students in sustained and rigorous dialogue” by making sure students are “not distracted by (let alone relying upon) whatever might be taking place on their screen at that time.”
And late last week, the University of Chicago Law School announced that it will ban laptops, tablets and phones in the classroom for first-year law students beginning this fall as part of its broader strategy of adapting legal education for the AI era. The ban is intended to prevent generative AI from undermining the Socratic method, which has long been a hallmark of legal education; instead of spending class time lecturing, law professors probe students with questions about legal theories and principles.
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DID LINDSAY SHIT HIS PANTS AND DIE?
Lindsey Graham’s Reported Home Death Erupts After Ex CIA Claims Ukraine Travel Timeline Does Not Match Records | by Rohit David | 07/14/26 | International Business Times
The reported death of US senator Lindsey Graham at his Washington home has sparked controversy after a former CIA analyst claimed that the timeline of his recent travel to Ukraine does not match official records.The 71-year-old Republican senator from South Carolina passed away on 11 July, his office confirmed.
The cause was an aortic dissection brought on by arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Emergency services were called to his Capitol Hill home on the Saturday evening.
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The official account of Graham dying at home has come under question in some quarters following statements made by former CIA analyst Larry Johnson. Johnson asserted that the duration of the trip to Ukraine together with the time required for the return journey would ...