Ayuda para la tarea de derecho
Esta es una herramienta de asistencia legal basada en tecnología de procesamiento de lenguaje natural que puede ayudar a los usuarios a encontrar rápidamente textos legales y explicaciones relevantes ingresando preguntas o palabras clave. La ayuda para la asignación de leyes utiliza los modelos GPT de OpenAI para analizar de manera inteligente las dudas del usuario y brindar respuestas relacionadas con esas preguntas legales. Al mismo tiempo, el proyecto puede aprender y optimizarse continuamente en función de los comentarios de los usuarios.
La ayuda con la tarea de derecho es un asistente legal de IA basado en la API OpenAI y la base de datos pgvector que puede ayudar a los usuarios a consultar y comprender rápidamente las leyes y regulaciones de los estados de EE. UU. y los principales países del mundo. Vale la pena ayudar a la gente corriente a comprender y aplicar mejor la ley y mejorar los conocimientos jurídicos.
- This is same excerpt from the previous question - but with a new question. "Sometimes a law is just on its face and unjust in its application. For instance I have been arrested on a charge of parading without a permit. Now, there is nothing wrong in having an ordinance which requires a permit for a parade But such an ordinance becomes unjust when it is used to maintain segregation and to deny citizens the First -Amendment privilege of peaceful assembly and protest." According to the excerpt why does he consider this law unjust? He says the law is being used to deny him his 1st Amendment right to peacefully protest He is being targeted unfairly.
- Excerpt from the letter: "Sometimes a law is just on its face and unjust in its application. For instance, I have been arrested on a charge of parading without a permit. Now, there is nothing wrong in having an ordinance which requires a permit for a parade.But such an ordinance becomes unjust when it is used to maintain segregation and to deny citizens the First-Amendment privilege of peaceful assembly and protest." Why was Dr. King arrested? "parading without a permit" violent protest
- Read the following claim from paragraph 1 of the passage. -In the United States.freedom of speech is protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution There have always bee limits to this freedom." Which evidence would be the most credible to support this claim? Statistics about limits on free speech from a protest flyer circulated at a university. Aquote from a website that advocates ending all limits to free speech. The text of an eighteenth century law that limits people's right to speak out against the government. A journal entry from 1798 that complains about a friend's imprisonment based on anti-government speech.
- Read this excerpt from an MLA-formatted paper. There have been many cases where portions of the text or entire articles have been removed from school newspapers for being insppropriate. A famous Supreme Court case involving this issue occurred in 1988 in Hazelwood v KuMImeier. The principal of Hazzlwood East High School prohibited two topics from being printed in the school newspaper. Hazelwood East students brought the case to court, arguing that their First Amendment right to free speech had been violated. In this case, the court ruled that the principal did not violate the students'free speech right. The court pointed out that the school newspaper was not a "public forum," and that, therefore, students did not have the same First Amendment rights as other journalists (Student Press Law Center) Look at the Works Cited below and then select the name of the publication or website that is the source of the citation. Barron, James. News Business Lags at High Schools Too." The New York Times, April 2010, www cityroom.blogs nytimes.com/201000227 news-business-lags-at-high schools. too? plap-trued, type-blogse 100. Accessed 30 April 2016 Student Press Law Center. The Hazelwood Decision and Student Press." Scholastic com, 2014, www scholastic comtochers/articlehare/wood -decision-and-student. press. Accersed 30 April 2016 Abutaleb, Yameen "School Dress Codes Aren't Just for Students Anymore UM Todin, 30 July 2012, www.usatoday30 usatoday cominoney modil istory/2012-07. 17.teacherdress-code. Accessed 4 May 2016. Your Favorite Dooks Were Ranned:" Huffington Pott, 22 Sep 2013 www.hollingtoopost.com/201100222bansed books in 196184 html Accessed 2 May 2016
- square 1. U.S. Citizenship and C Immigration Services (USCIS) square 2. Undocumented square 3. Nonimmigrant square 4. Green Card square Resident (LPR) 5. Lawful Permanent square 6. Visa square 7. Asylum square 8. Deportation square 9. DREAMer A. A travel document issued by the country a person is traveling to that grants entry to that country B. Someone visiting the United States temporarily C. The federal agency that manages lawful U.S immigration D. Someone who illegally entered the U.S. as a child E. Safety; protection from danger F. An identification card issued by the USCIS that proves lawful permanent residency G. Removal from a country H. An immigrant with permission to live and work in the United States 1. A term used to refer to immigrants living in the U.S.without lawful permission