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Your AI Conversations Are Not Privileged — And the Court Just Confirmed It

By Stephane Boghossian · · 14 min read · Ai-legal-tech

A federal judge ruled that documents generated using AI tools are not protected by attorney-client privilege. This is not a philosophical debate. It is a structural warning to the legal profession.

Most lawyers just watched this decision scroll past on X and reacted emotionally. Some said it was nonsense. Some said it would be overturned. Some said judges are protecting their own industry. Some said "just use local models." None of that changes the core issue.

This is not a philosophical debate. It is a structural warning to the legal profession.

Your AI Conversations Are Not Privileged

And the Court Just Confirmed It.

The court's reasoning was not dramatic. It was doctrinal.

Attorney-client privilege requires: a communication, between attorney and client, for the purpose of obtaining legal advice, and made in confidence.

An AI tool is not an attorney. It has no law license. It owes no duty of loyalty. It owes no duty of confidentiality. Its terms explicitly disclaim any attorney-client relationship.

If you input your legal strategy into a commercial AI platform, you are communicating with a third party. That destroys privilege.

It does not matter that the interface feels conversational. It does not matter that it feels like advice. It does not matter that you later forwarded the output to your lawyer. You cannot retroactively create privilege by sending non-privileged material to counsel. Courts have been clear on that for decades. The only difference now is that the "third party" happens to be AI.

The Privacy Policy Problem No One Reads

What made the situation worse for the defendant was the AI provider's own privacy policy.

At the time of use, the provider expressly reserved the right to collect prompts, retain outputs, use data for training, and disclose information to governmental authorities and third parties.

That clause alone undermines any claim of a reasonable expectation of confidentiality. Privilege requires confidentiality. If the platform reserves the right to disclose your data, your expectation of confidentiality collapses.

The Dangerous Wrinkle: When Counsel Becomes a Witness

The judge also flagged something more serious. The defendant reportedly fed information received from his own attorneys into the AI tool. If prosecutors attempt to use those AI-generated documents at trial, defense counsel could become a fact witness.

That creates disqualification risk, ethical complications, evidentiary instability, and potential mistrial exposure. Winning or losing the privilege motion does not simplify what comes next. AI is not just a confidentiality issue. It is a litigation risk multiplier if used improperly.

Why the Public Reaction Misses the Point

The reactions online were predictable: "The system is protecting itself." "This is why confidential AI is necessary." "This will be overturned." "Lawyers are afraid of losing control."

The reality is far less dramatic. The ruling is doctrinally consistent with long-standing privilege law. What changed is not the doctrine. What changed is user behavior.

People experience AI as a sounding board, a silent advisor, a personal research assistant. But legally, it is a third-party platform. That psychological gap is the real problem.

The Core Risk for Law Firms and General Counsel

If your clients are using public AI tools to summarize your advice, stress-test legal strategy, draft internal risk memos, prepare for litigation, or brainstorm negotiation tactics — those prompts may be discoverable.

Every prompt is a potential disclosure. Every output is a potentially discoverable document.

If you are not proactively advising clients on this, you are already behind.

What Lawyers Must Do Immediately

1. Update Engagement Letters

Explicitly state: any information input into public AI platforms may not be privileged and may be discoverable. Do not assume clients understand this distinction. They do not.

2. Address It During Onboarding

Make it part of your intake conversation. Clients need to understand that AI chat logs are not the same as confidential communications with counsel.

3. Do Not Rely on Hope

Saying "just don't use AI" is unrealistic. Clients will use it. The only serious response is to design safer infrastructure.

The Architectural Solution: AI Inside the Privilege

The long-term answer is not prohibition. It is controlled integration.

If AI is going to be used in legal matters, it must operate within the attorney-client relationship, under lawyer supervision, inside secure firm-controlled environments, with defined governance, with auditability, with no training on client data, and with jurisdiction-aware data handling.

This is not about marketing language. This is about professional responsibility.

In our Legal AI Workshop materials, we emphasize that any legal professional using AI must ensure four obligations are met: Disclosure, Competence, Confidentiality, and Oversight. These are not optional. They are structural.

Why Generic AI Is Not Built for Legal Privilege

Public AI platforms are designed for scale. They are built to optimize performance, improve models, aggregate data, and serve millions of users. They are not designed to replicate the attorney-client privilege structure.

That does not make them malicious. It makes them commercially rational. But legal privilege is not a commercial concept. It is a professional one.

There is a difference between "AI that generates text" and "AI embedded inside a law firm's operating system." That difference determines risk.

The HAQQ Legal AI Perspective

At HAQQ Legal AI, we have been clear: AI is not a chatbot layered on top of legal work. It must be integrated into the legal operating system. It must function inside structured workspaces tied to matters, clients, permissions, roles, audit trails, and jurisdictional controls.

It must be governed. It must be supervised. And it must operate under the lawyer's responsibility, not outside it.

The Bigger Picture: This Will Not Be the Last Case

This decision is only the beginning. We will likely see future litigation addressing local models, on-premise deployments, enterprise agreements, government subpoenas, cross-border data transfers, health and mental health AI use, and corporate compliance contexts.

The legal profession is entering a new phase. The question is no longer "Can AI help draft?" The question is "Where does AI sit in the privilege structure?" Firms that answer that correctly will protect their clients and themselves. Firms that ignore it will eventually confront it in discovery.

Final Take

If you are a managing partner, a general counsel, a litigation strategist, or a compliance officer — you cannot treat AI as a casual research tool anymore.

This ruling makes one thing clear: AI conversations outside the attorney-client relationship are not privileged.

The illusion of privacy is not privacy. The feeling of confidentiality is not confidentiality. If AI is going to sit at the table in legal strategy, it must sit inside the privilege. Anything else is risk disguised as convenience.