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E-research library with AI tools to assist lawyers | Delhi News
New Delhi: In an attempt to integrate legal work in courts with artificial intelligence, Bar Council of Delhi (BCD) has opened a one-of-its-kind e-research library at the Rouse Avenue courts. Inaugurated on July 5 by law minister Kapil Mishra, the library has various software to assist lawyers in their legal work. With initial funding of Rs 20 lakh, BCD functionaries told TOI that they are also planning the expansion of the library to be accessed from anywhere.Named after former BCD chairman BS Sherawat, the library boasts an integrated system, including the legal research platform SCC Online, the legal research online database Manupatra, and an AI platform, Lucio, along with several e-books on law across 15 desktops.Advocate Neeraj, president of Central Delhi Bar Court Association, told TOI, “The vision behind this initiative is to help law practitioners in their research. Lawyers are the officers of the honourable court who assist the judicial officer to reach a verdict in cases. This library will help lawyers in their legal work. Keeping that in mind, considering a request by our association, BCD provided us with funds and resources.”The library, which runs from 9:30 am to 5:30 pm, aims to develop a mechanism with the help of the evolution of technology to allow access from anywhere in the country. “We are thinking along those lines too. It will be good if a lawyer needs some research on some law point and can access the AI tools from anywhere; she will be able to upgrade herself immediately to assist the court and present her case more efficiently,” added Neeraj.Staffed with one technical person and a superintendent, the facility will incur around Rs 1 lakh per month to remain functional.With pendency in Delhi district courts now running over 15.3 lakh cases, AI tools can help law practitioners as well as the courts. Advocate Vikas Tripathi, vice-president of Central Delhi Court Bar Association, said, “Imagine AI tools which can give you relevant references, cite related judgments, and even prepare a case if provided with proper inputs. The AI tools have immense potential.”In July 2024, ‘Adalat AI’ was inaugurated in Delhi’s district courts. This AI-driven speech recognition software is designed to assist court stenographers in transcribing witness examinations and orders dictated by judges to applications designed to streamline workflow. This tool automates many processes. A judicial officer has to log in, press a few buttons, and speak out their observations, which are automatically transcribed, including the legal language. The order is automatically prepared.The then Delhi High Court Chief Justice, now SC Judge Manmohan, said, “The biggest problem I see judges facing is that there is a large demand for stenographers, but there’s not a large pool available. I think this app will solve that problem to a large extent. It will ensure that a large pool of stenographers will become available for other purposes.” At present, the application is being used in at least eight states, including Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, Bihar, Odisha, Haryana and Punjab.
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The Media and I: Artificial Intelligence
Lars and I discussed the role of AI in education and beyond, starting with a nostalgic nod to calculators and slide rules.
When I spoke with Lars recently, I emphasized the critical balance between using tools like AI and actually learning how to think, reason, and create. We touched on the incredible capabilities of AI, raising exciting possibilities and serious concerns. For example, AI-driven customer service can be frustratingly impersonal—I yelled at one for eight minutes earlier that day just trying to reach a human. In education, some elite universities are already requiring handwritten essays again, like with Blue Books, to preserve that integrity. However, as I have written previously about AI and medicine, it has the potential to increase accessibility and the quality of care.
You can find the whole conversation here.
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China outpacing rest of the world in AI research – report
China is outpacing the rest of the world in artificial intelligence research at a time when AI is becoming a “strategic asset” akin to energy or military capability, according to a report from research technology company Digital Science.
The report – entitled DeepSeek and the New Geopolitics of AI: China’s ascent to research pre-eminence in AI – has been authored by Digital Science CEO Daniel Hook based on data from Dimensions, the world’s largest and most comprehensive database describing the global research ecosystem.
The news comes just a day after a report from Clarivate revealed that China is also leading the way in research output across G20 nations.
Dr Hook has analysed AI research data from the year 2000 to 2024, tracking trends in research collaborations and placing these within geopolitical, economic, and technological contexts. His report says AI research has grown at an “impressive rate” globally since the turn of the millennium – from just under 10,000 publications in 2000, to 60,000 publications in 2024.
Dr Hook’s key findings include:
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China has become the pre-eminent world power in AI research, leading not only by research volume, but also by citation attention, and influence, rapidly increasing its lead on the rest of the world over the past seven years.
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The US continues to have the strongest AI start-up scene, but China is catching up fast.
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In 2024, China’s AI research publication output matched the combined output of the US, UK, and European Union (EU-27), and now commands more than 40% of global citation attention.
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Despite global tensions, China has become the top collaborator for the US, UK, and EU in AI research, while needing less reciprocal collaboration than any of them.
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China’s AI talent pool dwarfs its rivals – with 30,000 active AI researchers and a massive student and postdoctoral population.
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The EU benefits from strong internal AI collaboration across its research bloc.
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China dominates AI-related patents – patent filings and company-affiliated AI research show China outpacing the US tenfold in some indicators, underscoring its capacity to translate research into innovation.
“AI is no longer neutral – governments are using it as a strategic asset, akin to energy or military capability, and China is actively leveraging this advantage,” Hook says. “Governments need to understand the local, national and geostrategic implications of AI, with the underlying concern that lack of AI capability or capacity could be damaging from economic, political, social, and military perspectives.”
Hook says China is “massively and impressively” growing its AI research capacity. Unlike Western nations with clustered AI hubs, he says China boasts 156 institutions publishing more than 50 AI papers each in 2024, supporting a nationwide innovation ecosystem. In addition, “China’s AI workforce is young, growing fast, and uniquely positioned for long-term innovation.”
He says one sign of China’s rapidly developing capabilities is its release of the DeepSeek chatbot in January this year. “The emergence of DeepSeek is not merely a technological innovation – it is a symbol of a profound shift in the global AI landscape. DeepSeek exemplifies China’s technological independence. Its cost-efficient, open-source LLM demonstrates the country’s ability to innovate around US chip restrictions and dominate AI development at scale.”
The report comments further on the AI research landscape in the US, UK and EU. It says the UK remains “small but globally impactful”. “Despite its modest size, the UK consistently punches above its weight in attention-per-output metrics.”
However, the EU “risks falling behind in translation and visibility”. “The EU shows weaker international collaboration beyond its borders and struggles to convert research into applied outputs (e.g., patents), raising concerns about its future AI competitiveness.”
Discover more in the full report: DeepSeek and the New Geopolitics of AI: China’s ascent to research pre-eminence in AI.
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China produces more AI research than US, UK and EU combined
China led the world in artificial intelligence research in 2024, producing the largest volume of publications after developing a “nationwide innovation ecosystem”, according to a new report.
Despite rising geopolitical tensions, China was also the top AI research collaborator for the US, UK and European Union.
The study, DeepSeek and the New Geopolitics of AI: China’s ascent to research pre-eminence in AI, is published by research technology company Digital Science and authored by its chief executive, Daniel Hook.
The analysis used global data from its Dimensions database, covering research publication and collaboration trends from 2000 to 2024.
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It says that AI research has grown at an “impressive rate” globally, expanding from just under 10,000 publications in 2000 to 60,000 in 2024.
China was found to be “the pre-eminent world power in AI research,” leading not only by research volume but also by “citation attention, and influence,” with its lead over the rest of the world growing rapidly over the past seven years.
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In 2024, China’s publication output in AI research matched the combined output of the US, UK and EU, while its share of global citation attention exceeded 40 per cent.
Despite political tensions, the report finds that China has become the strongest AI research collaborator for the US, UK and EU, while itself needing “less reciprocal collaboration than any of them”.
China is also said to have the largest AI talent pool, with 30,000 active researchers and a large student and postdoctoral population, supporting what the report calls a “nationwide innovation ecosystem”.
The report highlights that 156 Chinese institutions each published more than 50 AI papers in 2024, contrasting with the more clustered research hubs in the West.
Alongside academic research, China also dominated AI-related patents. Patent filings and company-affiliated AI research showed China outpacing the US tenfold in some indicators, according to the report, reflecting the country’s ability to translate research into innovation.
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Hook argued that AI had become a “strategic asset, akin to energy or military capability”, adding that “China is actively leveraging this advantage”.
He added: “Governments need to understand the local, national and geostrategic implications of AI, with the underlying concern that lack of AI capability or capacity could be damaging from economic, political, social and military perspectives.”
The release of the DeepSeek chatbot in January 2025 was cited as one example of China’s emerging capabilities.
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“The emergence of DeepSeek is not merely a technological innovation – it is a symbol of a profound shift in the global AI landscape,” Hook said.
He described DeepSeek as demonstrating “China’s technological independence”, calling it a “cost-efficient, open-source LLM” that showed the country’s ability to “innovate around US chip restrictions and dominate AI development at scale”.
The report also describes the UK as “small but globally impactful”, saying that despite its modest size, the country consistently punches above its weight in “attention-per-output metrics”.
The EU, by contrast, “risks falling behind in translation and visibility.”
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The report says that while the EU benefits from strong internal collaboration, it “shows weaker international collaboration beyond its borders and struggles to convert research into applied outputs (patents, for example), raising concerns about its future AI competitiveness”.
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