Daily Guardian UAEDaily Guardian UAE
  • Home
  • UAE
  • What’s On
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
  • More
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
What's On

Max Fashion and Google Cloud: New Era of Omnichannel Shopping

June 11, 2026

Your Windows 11 PC can now natively run AI workloads, even if it lacks the Copilot+ badge

June 11, 2026

US$600 Trillion Tokenisation: The Future of Finance

June 11, 2026

Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme could be the plot twist handheld gaming needed

June 11, 2026

Elevate Records Surge in Al Marjan Island Beachfront Sales

June 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian UAE
Subscribe
  • Home
  • UAE
  • What’s On
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
  • More
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
Daily Guardian UAEDaily Guardian UAE
Home » Microsoft built an AI agent for laywers in Word. Let’s hope it doesn’t go berserk.
Technology

Microsoft built an AI agent for laywers in Word. Let’s hope it doesn’t go berserk.

By dailyguardian.aeMay 2, 20263 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Microsoft Word is getting an AI legal agent, which sounds helpful until you remember how badly this has gone before. The new Legal Agent can review contracts, suggest edits, compare versions, and flag risky clauses inside Word. On paper, these features sound quite useful and convenient, however, cases of generative AI tools hallucinating and inventing entire cases, citations and quotes from thin air have dragged some real people in real court trouble before.

What can Microsoft’s Legal Agent do?

Microsoft says Legal Agent is available through Copilot in Word for users in its Frontier program in the U.S. It currently works on Word for Windows desktop. There is no separate app or installation required, though some users may need to restart Word before the agent appears.

Legal Agent is meant for contract and document review. Microsoft says it can check a contract clause by clause against a legal playbook, review a full agreement, compare different versions, flag risks and obligations, and suggest edits with tracked changes. It is also keeps the original formatting, tables, lists, and negotiation history intact.

The company is also trying to avoid the obvious nightmare scenario for its users and itself. The feature has built-in safeguards like providing citations linked to source language, so reviewers can check suggestions before using them, along with clear disclaimers that it does not provide legal advice, may produce inaccurate content, and still requires review by a qualified legal professional before anything is relied on.

Why should lawyers still be nervous?

There is already precedent for AI going rogue in legal settings as two New York lawyers were sanctioned in 2023 and ordered to pay a $5,000 fine after submitting a court filing that included fake cases generated by ChatGPT. Michael Cohen, Donald Trump’s former lawyer, also admitted that he unknowingly gave his attorney fake case citations generated by Google Bard. While Cohen was not sanctioned, the judge still called the episode embarrassing and stressed the need for skepticism when using AI in legal work.

These are not isolated cases as Judges have questioned or disciplined attorneys in multiple instances involving AI-assisted filings, and one French data scientist and lawyer identified hundreds of court documents containing fake citations and nonexistent references over the past year.

the side of a Microsoft building

The bigger problem is that hallucinations remain unresolved. AI chatbots can still produce answers that sound confident while being partly or completely wrong. In legal work, that is especially dangerous, because a made-up citation or invented case can end up in a filing and create serious consequences.

Microsoft has put many safeguards on Legal Agent to prevent these issues, however, the lesson is already written in court records. AI can speed up legal work, but the responsibility of fact checking still falls on the lawyer.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Your Windows 11 PC can now natively run AI workloads, even if it lacks the Copilot+ badge

Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme could be the plot twist handheld gaming needed

Amazon’s Sleep Studio feature turns Echo devices into a soothing sleep-bringer for kids

OpenAI teams up with Visa to enable secure payments through AI agents

Xbox’s next era may start with a painful question about console prices

Jabra Evolve3 75 review: I wore this work headset for weeks, and it was a revelation

Deezer is fighting against slop with a tool that detects AI music on streaming platforms

YouTube has revived direct messaging so you can finally share videos without leaving the app

Waiting for your Framework Laptop 13 Pro? You’ll be waiting a bit longer

Editors Picks

Your Windows 11 PC can now natively run AI workloads, even if it lacks the Copilot+ badge

June 11, 2026

US$600 Trillion Tokenisation: The Future of Finance

June 11, 2026

Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme could be the plot twist handheld gaming needed

June 11, 2026

Elevate Records Surge in Al Marjan Island Beachfront Sales

June 11, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest UAE news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest Posts

Amazon’s Sleep Studio feature turns Echo devices into a soothing sleep-bringer for kids

June 11, 2026

Exclusive Insurance Benefits for Abu Dhabi Chamber Members

June 11, 2026

OpenAI teams up with Visa to enable secure payments through AI agents

June 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian UAE. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.