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Startup behind “world’s first robot lawyer” to pay $193K for false ads, FTC says

You can’t “sue anyone with a click of a button” without testing it first, FTC says.

Enlarge (credit: style-photography | iStock / Getty Images Plus)

Among the first AI companies that the Federal Trade Commission has exposed as deceiving consumers is DoNotPay—which initially was advertised as “the world’s first robot lawyer” with the ability to “sue anyone with the click of a button.”

On Wednesday, the FTC announced that it took action to stop DoNotPay from making bogus claims after learning that the AI startup conducted no testing “to determine whether its AI chatbot’s output was equal to the level of a human lawyer.” DoNotPay also did not “hire or retain any attorneys” to help verify AI outputs or validate DoNotPay’s legal claims.

DoNotPay accepted no liability. But to settle the charges that DoNotPay violated the FTC Act, the AI startup agreed to pay $193,000, if the FTC’s consent agreement is confirmed following a 30-day public comment period. Additionally, DoNotPay agreed to warn “consumers who subscribed to the service between 2021 and 2023” about the “limitations of law-related features on the service,” the FTC said.

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