WTE Ask is an AI-assisted Q&A feature on this site. It is designed to help readers understand topics by answering questions using a growing subset of WTE’s published materials.
WTE Ask is an educational tool. It does not provide legal advice, and it is not a substitute for consulting a lawyer about your particular facts.
What WTE Ask Can Do
WTE Ask can:
- Explain concepts discussed in WTE articles in plainer language
- Summarize points covered in WTE posts when those materials are in its knowledge base
- Help readers connect related topics that WTE has already addressed
- Answer readers' follow-up questions
- Link to relevant posts on this site that are relevant to the discussion
What WTE Ask Can’t Do
WTE Ask cannot:
- Provide legal advice or tell you what you should do in your specific situation
- Promise complete coverage of any topic
- Fill gaps by guessing when the site’s materials do not address the question
- Claim access to third-party transcripts, databases, or research tools
If You See a Confident Answer That Doesn’t Fit
If a response sounds too certain, too broad, or not grounded in what WTE has actually published, treat it as a signal to double-check the underlying post (or to recognize that the issue may not yet be covered in the current knowledge base), and let Hani Sarji know any improvements you might have.
Hani Sarji
New York lawyer who cares about people, is fascinated by technology, and is writing his next book, Estate of Confusion: New York.
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