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KPMG Report on AI Plagued by Hallucinations and Fake Citations
En desarrollo
Business·3 g önceResumen IA

KPMG Report on AI Plagued by Hallucinations and Fake Citations

KPMG's report on AI, "Total Experience: Redefining Excellence in the Age of Agentic AI," contained numerous AI hallucinations, including fake citations and inaccurate claims about companies like Emirates, UBS, and Swiss Federal Railways. GPTZero, an AI content detection tool maker, found that most citations were inaccurate or fabricated, and about half of the paper's claims were false. KPMG has since withdrawn the report and is investigating.

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Engadget
Sullivan & Cromwell Apologizes to Federal Judge for AI-Generated Errors in Bankruptcy Filing
En desarrollo
Legal·23.04.2026Resumen IA

Sullivan & Cromwell Apologizes to Federal Judge for AI-Generated Errors in Bankruptcy Filing

Sullivan & Cromwell, one of America's largest law firms, has apologized to a federal bankruptcy judge for AI-generated errors in a court filing. The firm submitted a letter on April 18 to the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, admitting that an emergency motion in the Prince Global Holdings bankruptcy case contained fictitious case names, fabricated quotes, and invented statutory provisions. Andrew Dietderich, founder of S&C's restructuring group, apologized on behalf of the firm, stating they had not followed protocols in preparing the document. The firm, which holds an enterprise license for ChatGPT, noted it instructs lawyers to 'trust nothing and verify everything' and that failure to verify AI output violates firm policy.

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Times of India
Sullivan & Cromwell Apologizes for AI Hallucinations in Court Filing
En desarrollo
Law·22.04.2026Resumen IA

Sullivan & Cromwell Apologizes for AI Hallucinations in Court Filing

Sullivan & Cromwell, a top Wall Street law firm, has apologized to a New York federal judge for AI-generated errors in a court filing. The firm admitted to misquoting the US bankruptcy code and incorrectly citing cases in a filing made on April 9. The errors were uncovered by rival firm Boies Schiller Flexner. The case involves liquidators from the British Virgin Islands pursuing actions against Prince Group, owned by Chinese-born businessman Chen Zhi, who faces US charges of wire fraud and money laundering related to alleged forced-labour scam compounds in Cambodia.

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Guardian Business