Brokers out there - this is also the same when any client includes you on an email to their attorney or asks you a question, it breaks privilege
If a legal conversation is getting hairy, it’s in the best interest of your client to remove yourself from that conversation
Sam Altman just confirmed what lawyers have been saying for over a year:
There’s no legal privilege when you use ChatGPT.
So if you’re pasting in contracts, asking legal questions, or asking it for strategy, you’re not getting legal advice. You’re generating discoverable evidence.
No attorney-client privilege. No confidentiality. No ethical duty. No one to protect you.
It might feel private, safe, and convenient. But lawyers are bound to protect you.
ChatGPT isn’t—and can be used against you.