MACHINE INTELLIGENCE AND LAW

Giuseppe Corasaniti

Instructional goals

The course constitutes the final teaching of the overall educational structure dedicated to legal informatics and composed of five preparatory laboratories and a final course distributed over the first three years of the single-cycle master's degree course in law at LUISS. The laboratories and the final course of Intelligent Machines and Law constitute a unitary and progressive path studied to develop interest and necessary knowledge on the complex interaction between computer science and law. The intent is to train jurists ready to face the challenges related to the legal consequences of the use, in every sector of social and working life, of information technologies and, considering the interdisciplinary vocation of the subject, to the "new rights" connected with the increasingly widespread use of self-learning machines. For this reason, during the course, the legal profiles related to the responsibility for the autonomous driving systems of vehicles, to contracts with automatic execution, the new rights of the person linked to profiling and the so-called credit scoring, the applications at the service of the judge and the judicial administration (also in the criminal sector), with particular attention to community legislation and Italian and international jurisprudence are analyzed. The student will therefore have to acquire technical and legal knowledge in order to fully understand the conditioning of the technique on the law and the legal effects linked to the use of artificial intelligence. This is a strategic objective that the Department of Jurisprudence has set itself, in the awareness that a full knowledge of information technologies and their disruptive impact on society, law, markets and institutions at a global level constitutes an indispensable foundation in the preparation of future jurists. The overwhelming innovation and encouraged by national and European public policies requires versatile professional figures, capable of applying the traditional categories of law to unprecedented technological phenomena, or even of building new ones capable of better regulating the present. To do this, an understanding of the basic architecture of networks, the languages of mathematics and the logic of algorithms is necessary, in order to fully assess the impact and legal consequences on the fundamental rights of the person. The Course of Intelligent Machines and Law, as the arrival point of this three-year path of technical and legal studies, constitutes the moment to systematize all the knowledge acquired in a moment of comprehensive analysis and synthesis of the previous laboratories and courses.

Prerequisites

Laboratory of Legal Informatics, Language and Logic of Machines, Artificial Intelligence, Artificial Intelligence, machine learning and law, Digital law and data protection. In particular, to take the exam you must have passed the digital skills assessment test and the preliminary examination of Digital Law and Data Protection.

Intended learning outcomes

Knowledge and comprehension: to achieve knowledge of some cutting-edge topics in the relevant field of study with the appropriate teaching support, knowledge of the debate and rules relating to the application of AI in significant economic and institutional fields, understanding of the practical and intellectual challenges represented by the activity of intelligent machines for law, its general theory and its various practices. Applied knowledge and comprehension: devising and supporting arguments related to the legal implications of the applications of artificial intelligence in the most diverse socio-economic fields. Making autonomous judgements: collecting and interpreting scientific and legal information relevant for the subject. Communication skills: communicating information, ideas, problems and solutions on Legal Informatics, using the specific scientific language. Ability to learn: having developed the skills necessary to undertake subsequent studies with a high degree of autonomy.

Course Contents

Intelligence and connectivity: Technological evolution and legal evolution; Law as a tool.

Reference Books

Recommended texts: Corasaniti G., Cybersecurity and Artificial Intelligence, Giappichelli Torino 2025, Corasaniti G., Legal Informatics and Innovative Digital Design, Nilano Workers Kluwer 2024, Corasaniti G., Data Science and Law, Giappichelli Torino 2022.

Teaching Methods

Frontal and distance teaching; individual exercises and group work (papers, role-playing and simulations on cases taken from Italian and international judicial news); analysis of judicial cases; expert testimony; presentations and assigned research with production of reports, articles and essays.

Assessment Method

The final grade, expressed in 30/thirtieth and regularly within the curricular average of the student, will result from the weighted average of the grades obtained previously in the preparatory laboratories and the outcome of the course exam for the following respective fees: 1/7 Machine Language and Logic (LABGP1) 1/7 Legal Informatics Laboratory (LABGP2) 1/7 Artificial Intelligence (LABGP3) 1/7 Artificial intelligence, machine learning and law (LABGP4) 1/7 Digital law and data protection (LABGP5) 2/7 Intelligent machines and straight (MID1) The latter’s vote will result from the evaluation of the following items for the respective percentage share: 20% frequency 10% active participation in the classroom 50% assessments of intermediate tests 20% final exam (written and oral) N.B. In order to assign a vote which corresponds to the weighted average of the votes obtained in the course of Legal Informatics, the student will be admitted to take the exam after presentation of a print from the web selfservice staff with the preparatory exams already passed and the marks obtained.

Thesis assignment criteria

For the assignment of a thesis it is necessary that the candidate has passed the exam with a good score after attending the lessons. The originality of the chosen topic and the experimentation of the chosen research method will be evaluated.

Week 1

Intelligence and connectivity: Technological evolution and legal evolution; Law as a tool.

Week 2

Neural networks and logical connections, inferences and connective understanding, logic, bias options. Machine learning and logical inferences between data and patterns.

Week 3

Notion of "intelligence" and underlying legal issues, responsibility and responsible perception, the dilemma of automatic decision-making. Diversified machine and ia models

Week 4

Generative artificial intelligence and semantic problems, with particular reference to law and legal language between generation and responsible application

Week 5

Decision-making schemes in law, deterministic reasoning and stochastic reasoning. the calculation in the judicial decision

Week 6

Risk thresholds and parameters and European and global regulation of artificial intelligence. cybersecurity profiles of datasets and data.

Week 7

Artificial intelligence and legal professions, examples and applications. Topics and consistency testing of general LLM language models in the legal field.

Week 8

Programma Esteso E Materiale Didattico Di Riferimento: Settimana 8 / Extended Program And Reference Reading Material: Week 8 PROGR_LEZ_1_8 3800 Sì Regolamentazione orizzontale o verticale dell'intelligenza artificiale , le tematiche della goverbnance e dell'accesso ai dati , la spiegabilità delle decisioni automatiche Horizontal or vertical regulation of artificial intelligence, the issues of governance and access to data, the explainability of automatic decisions

Week 9

Diversified models of Artificial Intelligence. The character and specificity of legal decisions. The basics of legal analysis. Legal text analytics and argument mining. Problem solving in the legal field.

Week 10

Ethics and Responsibility. Automatic decision making and the main issues of civil liability for automatic decisions. Towards digital compliance

Week 11

Artificial intelligence and European GDPR, the European Regulation on artificial intelligence. Informed consent and artificial intelligence The international regulation of personal data and datasets and artificial intelligence applications.

Week 12

Medical applications and the themes of integrated digital bioethics. Civil and military applications. Cybersecurity and artificial intelligence.