AdaptLaw Disclaimer

Effective Date: February 8, 2026


AdaptLaw Is Not Legal Advice

AdaptLaw is an AI-powered legal information and research tool. It is designed to help you explore legal concepts, understand constitutional frameworks, and organize your legal research.

AdaptLaw is not a law firm. AdaptLaw is not a lawyer. AdaptLaw does not provide legal advice.

No attorney-client relationship is created by using AdaptLaw. No privilege, confidentiality obligation, or fiduciary duty arises from your use of the Service.


What "VERIFIED" Means

When AdaptLaw marks a citation as VERIFIED, it means the legal concept, case name, statute, or constitutional provision was confirmed to exist in the AdaptLaw knowledge graph -- a database of 29,000+ legal concepts and 57,000+ relationships that has been curated from authoritative legal sources.

VERIFIED does NOT mean:

  • The legal analysis or interpretation is guaranteed to be correct
  • The information is current or up-to-date
  • The concept applies to your specific jurisdiction or situation
  • The analysis constitutes legal advice
  • A court would reach the same conclusion

VERIFIED means only that the cited source was found in and confirmed against the knowledge graph.


Limitations of AI Analysis

AdaptLaw uses large language models (LLMs) including Google Gemini, Anthropic Claude, and OpenAI GPT-4o to generate legal analysis. These AI systems have inherent limitations:

  • AI can produce errors. LLMs can generate plausible-sounding but incorrect legal analysis, cite cases that don't exist, or misstate legal rules.
  • AI can hallucinate. Even with our verified knowledge graph as grounding, the AI may generate content that goes beyond what the graph confirms.
  • AI has knowledge cutoffs. The underlying AI models may not reflect the most recent legal developments, court decisions, or legislative changes.
  • AI lacks judgment. AI cannot assess the specific facts of your situation, weigh competing considerations the way an experienced attorney would, or predict how a court might rule.

Always Consult an Attorney

For any real legal matter, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.

This includes but is not limited to:

  • Lawsuits and litigation
  • Criminal charges or investigations
  • Contract drafting, review, or disputes
  • Business formation and regulatory compliance
  • Family law matters (divorce, custody, adoption)
  • Real estate transactions
  • Immigration matters
  • Tax disputes
  • Employment disputes
  • Any situation where legal rights or obligations are at stake

An attorney can assess the specific facts of your case, advise you on applicable law in your jurisdiction, and represent your interests. AdaptLaw cannot do any of these things.


Legal Information Changes

The law is not static. Statutes are amended, courts issue new rulings, and legal interpretations evolve. Information in the AdaptLaw knowledge graph, while curated from authoritative sources, may not reflect the most recent changes. Always verify that the legal information you find is current and applicable to your situation.


State and Jurisdiction Variations

Legal rules vary significantly between states, counties, and municipalities. A legal principle that applies in one jurisdiction may not apply in another. Federal law may differ from state law. AdaptLaw's analysis draws from a broad knowledge base and may not account for the specific legal nuances of your jurisdiction. Always confirm jurisdiction-specific rules with a local attorney.


Contact

If you have questions about this disclaimer:

  • Email: support@adaptlaw.io
  • Website: https://adaptlaw.io

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