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Your AI Isn't a Lawyer. It's a Dentist With a Keyboard.

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

A 90-minute conversation with three US attorneys — and everything it revealed about the real gap between ChatGPT and a legal engine built for the profession. The dentist analogy, the four-agent architecture, the live three-NDA cross-analysis, and why "I don't know" is a feature.

Last week, we spent 90 minutes with three US attorneys at a firm serving immigration, entertainment, and policy clients. It started as a product demo. It turned into one of the most honest, high-signal conversations we've had about why general-purpose AI is quietly failing the legal profession, and what it actually takes to replace it.

This post is a walkthrough of what came out of that conversation - the objections, the demonstrations, the architecture, and the philosophy behind HAQQ Legal AI.

Part 1: The attorney who pushed back

Fifteen minutes in, one of the attorneys - an entertainment lawyer juggling a 10-month-old at home - said what most lawyers think but rarely say out loud:

I'm not really getting how this is different from ChatGPT. I use it a lot. I know how to prompt it, I fact-check everything, and I still rely on my own forms and prior agreements. How is HAQQ different?

It's the right question. And it deserves a real answer - not marketing.

Part 2: The dentist analogy

A dentist can draft a contract. Nothing stops them. But would you sign it?

That is the difference between ChatGPT and HAQQ.

ChatGPT is a general language engine, engineered to produce fluent, plausible text on any topic. It is optimized to keep the conversation going - not to be correct. If it doesn't know, it guesses. That's not a bug; it's the design goal.

HAQQ is a legal engine. Trained predominantly on legal data - statutes, case law, regulations, filings across jurisdictions - and explicitly trained to refuse when it doesn't know. Ask it about aspirin, and it tells you it's not qualified. Ask it about habeas corpus arguments for a client granted withholding of removal in a specific federal district - the exact question one of the attorneys posed live on the call - and it does the work.

Reliability over fluency. "I don't know" over a confident wrong answer.

Part 3: Why "I don't know" is a feature, not a flaw

An immigration attorney on the call put it bluntly:

I use ChatGPT like a language professor. For grammar. For research on jurisdictions or whether a case is still good law? We'd be remiss to rely on it 100%.

She's right to be cautious. The cost of an AI that bluffs is borne by the lawyer - and ultimately the client. Hallucinated citations, outdated forms, superseded case law. Courts have already sanctioned attorneys for it.

HAQQ assigns a very high internal value to the truth. That includes saying "I don't know" when appropriate - because "I don't know" is strictly better than a wrong answer dressed up as a right one. That constraint is what makes the output trustworthy.

Part 4: The legal twin - it sounds like you

The managing attorney told us the single most important quality she hires for is reliability. Her reputation is everything. She extreme-vets every attorney who touches her firm's name - reviews, clientele, consistency, execution. "Hustlers with chops," she called them.

That's the bar. And it's the bar HAQQ is built to clear.

HAQQ isn't a chatbot bolted onto a legal FAQ. It's a legal twin - it ingests your firm's prior work, your client files, your style, your preferred forms. Your unique fingerprint gets encoded into the AI. It thinks like you, writes like you, knows what you know.

Every lawyer using ChatGPT today sounds the same - because they're all drawing from the same public corpus. Your voice disappears. That matters. The immigration attorney raised it directly:

If I structure my brief this way, and the judge goes to the same platform, they're going to know it's not coming from me. It's coming from artificial intelligence. That worries me.

This is a real concern, and general-purpose LLMs make it worse. The HAQQ answer: we don't produce generic AI output. We produce output in your voice, drawn from your prior work, fitted to your firm's patterns. That's the whole point of the twin architecture.

Part 5: The four agents - paralegal, associate, partner, twin

Inside HAQQ, you don't get one model. You get four, tiered by depth, length of output, and access to data:

You choose based on the job. Short answer? Paralegal. Full research memo or a cross-document risk analysis? Twin.

Think of it the way you think of ChatGPT vs. ChatGPT Pro - same interface, radically different engines.

Part 6: Treat it like an associate, not Google

The single most common mistake new users make - and we see it across the 10,000+ firms already on HAQQ - is treating the AI like a search engine.

Does it know this law? Does it know that law?

It probably does. But that's not where the value is.

The value is in delegating work. Upload a client's immigration file and ask: what's the likelihood of approval, what strategy should we pursue, draft the papers. Upload three NDAs and ask for a cross-analysis. Upload a full case file and ask for a brief. Ask it to redline a contract, or to write a consultation memo, or to surface risk.

Anything a five-lawyer team can do, HAQQ can do - from one prompt.

Part 7: The prompt is a contract

That said, the output is only as good as the prompt. The framing we shared on the call:

Across 10,000 firms, we have yet to see a genuine hallucination. Every case people flag as a "mistake" traces back to an under-specified prompt. We provide training material on prompting - because this is the single highest-leverage skill a modern lawyer can develop.

Part 8: The live demo - three NDAs, 90 seconds

On the call, we uploaded three NDAs and asked HAQQ to cross-analyze them from HAQQ's own commercial perspective, flag risks, and recommend whether to sign all three simultaneously.

Ninety seconds later: a 20-page analysis. A side-by-side table covering nature, purpose, governing law, forum, duration, liability, data protection, sub-processors and contractors, reverse engineering, return and destruction obligations, non-solicitation. A ranking of which NDA was most favorable, which carried the highest legal risk, and a combined-risk assessment for executing all three together.

It flagged specifics no general LLM would catch: "overly narrow permitted recipients," "registered-mail-only notice - impractical for urgent breach, injunctive, or escalation communications," "entity ambiguity," "return on demand."

Download as Word. Download as PDF. Edit on the canvas. Ask for changes inline. Done.

That's not a research assistant. That's the work product of a competent mid-level associate - delivered in the time it takes to refill your coffee.

Part 9: Beyond three documents - the data room use case

The demo used three NDAs. But HAQQ isn't limited to what you attach in a single prompt.

Because every file you upload lives in the system's knowledge base, you can run cross-analyses across every NDA your firm has ever signed. Across entire case files. Across entire data rooms. You can ask:

This is what we mean when we say lawyers can finally weaponize their own data. The institutional memory of your firm - previously locked in folders no one has time to search - becomes a live, queryable asset feeding every piece of work you produce.

Part 10: The other half - a full practice-management system

HAQQ isn't just an AI. It's a multi-product ecosystem. When you create an account, you get two products today (evolving at the end of the month as we restructure the architecture):

And critically: everything in the practice system feeds the knowledge base of your AI. Your clients, your matters, your files, your prior work - all of it informs every answer the AI gives you. For the first time in the legal industry, lawyers can run their firm and train their AI in the same motion.

Part 11: Multilingual, across jurisdictions

HAQQ is multi-jurisdictional. It's competent across most of the world's major legal systems.

It is also multilingual - it reads and produces output in nearly any language. Critical for immigration firms, who routinely receive documents in Spanish, Korean, Japanese, and dozens of other languages.

One honest caveat: this is transliteration, not word-for-word legal translation. It captures meaning, not literal equivalence. For formal legal translations - court filings, sworn documents - double-check with a certified translator. For understanding, analysis, and cross-referencing foreign-language documents inside a matter, HAQQ handles it end to end.

Part 12: The 44-page research paper - what depth actually looks like

Before the demo, we showed the group a document HAQQ had produced for internal use: a 44-page research paper comparing corporate structuring options across Cyprus, Delaware, ADGM, the IFC, Cayman Islands, Singapore, and Hong Kong - optimizing for tax efficiency, asset ownership, and asset protection.

Fully cited. Proper research-paper structure. Depth that would normally represent roughly 50 hours of billable work from a team of associates.

This is what we mean by client-ready output. Not a first draft you then spend an hour editing - actual depth, actual citations, actual analysis.

Part 13: How we benchmark - and why ChatGPT itself ranks us highest

We benchmarked HAQQ against every major LLM on the market using 168 legal prompts. We fed each prompt into every system, collected outputs, and - here's the interesting part - asked ChatGPT itself to rate them all out of 10.

HAQQ scored highest. Not because of interface polish or branding. Because of reliability. HAQQ didn't make the errors the other systems made.

That's not visible from the UI. We deliberately designed HAQQ to look like ChatGPT, because we want lawyers to feel comfortable using it the way they already feel comfortable using ChatGPT. The familiarity is a feature. The engine underneath is not the same machine.

Part 14: Security first - because it has to be

Before we talk about any feature, we talk about this: your clients' data is yours.

Reputation is everything. We built HAQQ assuming yours depends on us not screwing this up.

We work with governments in the Middle East - the good ones, to be clear - and the compliance bar for those relationships is exactly what it should be: unforgiving.

Part 15: The compounding effect - what this actually changes

Here is what we told the firm, and what we believe:

The same 10-person firm, running on HAQQ, competes with a firm 10 times its size. Work no longer takes time. Work takes direction.

The bottleneck in legal work has never been intelligence. It's been throughput - the hours it takes to draft, review, cross-reference, redline, cite-check, and package. Remove the throughput constraint and the economics of the firm fundamentally change.

Smaller firms serve bigger clients. Solo practitioners take on matters they'd previously refer out. Immigration firms run 10x the caseload at the same quality. Partners spend their time on strategy and relationships - the things that actually require a human - while the machinery of the profession runs in the background.

This isn't hypothetical. Six months after launch, 10,000+ firms use HAQQ - across the US, UK, France, Brazil, China, Dubai, and the broader Middle East. Our client base doubles every three months.

Part 16: What we'd say to every attorney still unsure

If you're still pasting client work into ChatGPT, you're training someone else's model on your clients' secrets - and hoping the output doesn't invent a case citation that ends up in front of a judge.

You deserve a tool built for the work you actually do. Not a language model pretending to know law. A legal engine, trained on law, designed to refuse when it doesn't know, and built to sound like you - not like every other lawyer using the same public AI.