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Binance’s CZ makes bold pitch to simplify laws using AI

ByHannah CollymoreHannah Collymore
2 mins read
  • Binance founder CZ proposes using AI to simplify complex national legal systems into plain language.
  • Zhao argues that lawyers’ time could be better spent on innovation than navigating outdated, conflicting laws.
  • Legal-tech firms like Wolters Kluwer and tools like Harvey.ai already use AI to streamline research and compliance.

Changpeng Zhao (CZ), the billionaire founder of Binance, has reignited the debate over the intersection of artificial intelligence and legal reform with a bold proposal: using AI to simplify national laws into clear, understandable language.

In a post shared on X (formerly Twitter), Zhao criticized legal systems as “gigantic, patched, added, and often intentionally made complex.”

“AI/LLMs are great at text processing. And laws should be simple and easy to understand, by a normal person,” Zhao added.

Zhao also emphasized that his post did not mean to disparage lawyers; instead, he argued that their expertise could be better used in innovation rather than untangling legalese.

CZ proposes AI as a legal reform and clarity toolkit

Zhao’s argument comes amid global efforts to regulate AI, such as the European Union’s AI Act and ongoing U.S. legislative debates. Yet, his suggestion flips the script, taking the conversation beyond whether AI can be regulated to talking about how the technology could help rewrite and streamline laws themselves.

Legal-tech advocates, including Wolters Kluwer, have already embraced generative AI to simplify legal research. In its “Straight Talk” series, the firm’s leaders argue that lawyers who leverage AI effectively can outpace those who don’t.

The U.S. tax code runs over 6,800 pages. At the same time, regulations like the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) have been repeatedly criticized for its opacity, even by the companies attempting to comply with them.

AI-based platforms like Harvey.ai, used by major firms, and tools from Wolters Kluwer’s VitalLaw AI now assist in summarizing decisions and streamlining contract reviews.

Stanford’s Human-AI collaboration lab found AI-generated legal briefs often rivaled human-written originals, although it cautioned about the occasional hallucinations that have embarrassed lawyers and drawn strong criticism from court officers.

Legal professionals agree that AI is part of their future

AI may shift law firm workloads from billable grunt work to strategic tasks, but legal practitioners must pair speed with judgment.A 2023 Wolters Kluwer’s “Straight Talk” survey notes that 73% of legal professionals expect to integrate generative AI into their work within a year.

While AI boosts efficiency in research and drafting, seasoned lawyers caution against blind trust without context and legal understanding. Binance itself has faced regulatory challenges across jurisdictions and reached a $4.3 billion settlement with U.S. authorities in 2023.

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