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Attorney Ethics & Bar Compliance

A reference brief for attorneys evaluating AI-assisted legal tools · Last updated June 2026

Note: This document is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or an ethics opinion. Attorneys should conduct their own review of applicable Rules of Professional Conduct and consult with their state bar's ethics counsel as appropriate. Rules vary by jurisdiction.

The Core Question

May an attorney use a cloud-based AI tool to assist with drafting, reviewing, and analyzing legal documents without violating duties of confidentiality, competence, or supervision?

The short answer, under the prevailing bar guidance: yes — provided the attorney exercises competent supervision, selects a vendor with reasonable security measures, and understands how the tool processes client data.

Governing Framework

The analysis flows from three Model Rules of Professional Conduct, adopted in substantially similar form by most U.S. jurisdictions:

Rule 1.6 — Confidentiality of Information

An attorney shall not reveal information relating to the representation of a client unless the client gives informed consent or disclosure is impliedly authorized to carry out the representation. Transmitting documents to a cloud vendor for processing is generally considered impliedly authorized under the same reasoning that permits use of email, phone, and third-party copying services — provided the attorney takes reasonable precautions.

Rule 1.1 — Competence

Comment 8 to Rule 1.1 (added in 2012) requires attorneys to maintain competence with "relevant technology." Bar ethics committees have consistently held that this includes understanding how AI tools process data — not building them. An attorney who understands what Ramtek Intelligence sends to Anthropic's API, what Anthropic does with it, and how to supervise the output meets this standard.

Rule 5.3 — Supervision of Non-Lawyer Assistance

Attorneys must make reasonable efforts to ensure that outside services — including AI tools — operate in a manner compatible with professional obligations. This requires selecting a vendor with appropriate data handling practices and reviewing AI outputs before relying on them. It does not require that AI never be used.

Key Bar Opinions

ABA Formal Opinion 477R (2017) — Securing Communication of Protected Client Information
Attorneys may use cloud-based tools to transmit and store client information when they apply "reasonable efforts" to ensure security. The opinion explicitly rejects a "perfect security" standard. Factors include: the sensitivity of the information, the likelihood of interception, the attorney's understanding of the technology, and the vendor's security practices.
Conclusion: Cloud AI tools are permissible with reasonable due diligence.
ABA Formal Opinion 512 (2023) — Generative Artificial Intelligence Tools
Directly addresses large language model AI tools in legal practice. Confirms that use of AI is consistent with professional obligations when the attorney: (1) understands the tool's capabilities and limitations; (2) supervises and reviews AI outputs; (3) takes reasonable steps to protect confidential information; and (4) charges only reasonable fees. The opinion does not prohibit AI use — it requires competent, supervised use.
Conclusion: AI tools are ethically permissible. Supervision and competence are the operative duties.
Florida Bar Ethics Opinion 24-1 (2024)
Addresses attorney use of AI tools including generative AI. Florida attorneys may use AI tools that process client information provided they: conduct reasonable due diligence on the vendor's data practices; ensure confidential information is not used to train public AI models; and supervise all AI-generated work product before use. The opinion notes that attorneys are not required to disclose AI use to clients unless the specific circumstances require it under Rule 1.4.
Conclusion: Florida attorneys may use Ramtek Intelligence consistent with this opinion.
State Bar of California Practical Guidance (2023)
California's guidance tracks the ABA framework: attorneys must understand the tool, supervise outputs, protect confidentiality, and ensure the vendor does not use client data for training without consent. The guidance specifically distinguishes between consumer AI products (where data may be used for training) and API-based enterprise tools (where data is not retained or used for training under Anthropic's terms).
Conclusion: API-based tools like Ramtek Intelligence fall in the permissible category under California guidance.

How Ramtek Intelligence Satisfies These Standards

Practical Guidance for Your Firm

Questions for Your Malpractice Carrier

If your carrier asks about AI tool use, the following answers apply to Ramtek Intelligence:


References: ABA Formal Opinion 477R (2017); ABA Formal Opinion 512 (2023); Florida Bar Ethics Opinion 24-1 (2024); State Bar of California Practical Guidance for the Use of Generative Artificial Intelligence (2023); ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rules 1.1, 1.6, 5.3. For questions, contact ramtekintelligence@gmail.com.