
The legal profession is about to confront a question it has never had to answer before:
When a lawyer speaks to a machine, who else is listening?
A recent federal ruling in U.S. v. Heppner concluded that communications with an artificial intelligence platform are not protected by attorney-client privilege. The court reasoned that privilege requires confidential communication between attorney and client — and a generative AI system is neither.
Almost immediately, lawyers pushed back. Some argued AI prompts are no different from Westlaw searches or Google queries — modern research tools reflecting counsel’s mental impressions, protected under the work-product doctrine.
But beneath that debate lies a much deeper issue — one that does not primarily affect attorneys.
It affects the legal record.
And therefore, it affects court reporters more than anyone else in the legal system.

Two Competing Legal Realities
The profession is now operating under two incompatible theories.
The attorney perspective:
AI is a thinking assistant — a research surface where lawyers test ideas.
The evidentiary perspective:
AI is a third-party analytical processor — a recipient of disclosed information.
The difference sounds philosophical, but legally it is everything.
Work product protects mental impressions.
Privilege protects confidential communication.
Both collapse once confidentiality is voluntarily surrendered.
And that is precisely where modern litigation workflows begin to collide with longstanding evidence doctrine.
Court Reporters Have Always Managed Confidentiality
For over a century, stenographic reporters have served a role rarely articulated but deeply understood inside the courtroom: they do not merely record the proceeding — they manage the boundary of the record.
Attorneys say “off the record.”
Sidebars occur.
Whispers pause testimony.
Strategy discussions are shielded.
The reporter acts as a human gatekeeper, separating protected communication from testimonial evidence.
The record exists because someone trained knows when it should not.
Digital recording systems do not make that distinction. They capture everything.
For decades this was tolerable because recordings were treated as internal storage — inert, contained, and human-reviewed.
Artificial intelligence changes the nature of the recording. It stops being storage and becomes analysis.
When Recording Becomes Disclosure
Here is the question the Heppner ruling forces courts to confront:
If a confidential discussion is captured and then processed by an independent analytical system, has it been disclosed?
Under traditional privilege doctrine, disclosure to a third party waives confidentiality unless that party is necessary to the legal representation and bound by duty.
An AI vendor is not counsel.
It is not a litigation support agent sworn into the representation.
It is not an officer of the court.
It is a processor.
And processing is interpretation.
This distinction matters profoundly in environments increasingly dominated by digital recording and automated transcript services.
The Risk Inside Digital Proceedings
Imagine a deposition room using continuous audio recording.
Before testimony begins, an attorney leans toward their client:
“Don’t mention the internal memo — we’ll handle that later.”
The microphones capture it.
No one notices.
The recording uploads automatically to a cloud transcription platform.
The platform generates searchable text and an AI summary.
That moment now exists in multiple locations:
- audio storage
- transcript text
- AI analysis output
- vendor processing systems
Under the logic emerging in recent rulings, the issue is no longer intent.
It is preservation.
The communication was not preserved as confidential.
It was distributed.
AI Summaries May Be the Most Dangerous Product in Legal Tech
Court reporting agencies increasingly sell automated deposition summaries — chronologies, topic charts, testimony analysis, witness evaluation.
They are marketed as harmless efficiency tools.
But they transform transcripts into something fundamentally different:
Not a record of what happened
but a machine interpretation of legal strategy.
Depositions are uniquely sensitive because attorneys think out loud inside them. Objections reveal theories. Follow-up questions reveal priorities. Redirect examination reveals weaknesses.
When AI systems process this information, they are not merely formatting text — they are extracting litigation meaning.
If privilege depends on confidentiality, automated analytical processing becomes legally significant.
The question becomes unavoidable:
Did counsel simply store testimony, or did they disclose strategy?
Why Westlaw Is Not the Same
Many lawyers argue the third-party issue is irrelevant because research platforms also operate on external servers.
But the analogy breaks down under scrutiny.
A legal database receives a query and returns published law.
An AI system receives confidential facts and generates conclusions about them.
One retrieves authority.
The other analyzes private information.
Courts have historically protected research because lawyers are not disclosing client secrets — they are asking questions about public law.
AI prompts, deposition uploads, and transcript analysis contain the opposite: private facts used to generate legal conclusions.
The difference is not technological.
It is evidentiary.
The Court Reporter Becomes the Safest Actor in the Room
Ironically, the profession once described as obsolete now becomes the most legally stable participant in litigation.
A stenographic reporter:
- Does not analyze the testimony
- Does not interpret strategy
- Does not distribute content to processing engines
- Produces a verbatim record controlled by officers of the court
In a legal environment increasingly concerned with inadvertent disclosure, neutrality becomes protection.
The human reporter is not merely capturing speech.
They are preserving the legal boundary between conversation and evidence.
That boundary may soon determine whether a case survives discovery.
The Coming Litigation Wave
The legal industry has not yet faced the test cases that will inevitably follow:
A litigant seeks AI summary outputs in discovery.
An opposing party argues waiver of work product.
A court examines how the data was processed.
At that moment, the difference between recording and analysis becomes outcome-determinative.
Entire litigation strategies may hinge on whether information ever left human custody.
Court reporting is no longer competing with convenience tools.
It is competing with evidentiary risk.
The Future of the Record
For decades, technology promised to replace stenographers because machines could capture sound.
But capturing sound is not the same as preserving the record.
The legal record is not simply what was said —
it is what was intended to be part of the proceeding.
Artificial intelligence collapses that distinction. It treats all captured speech as analyzable data.
The Heppner ruling may ultimately be remembered not as a decision about chatbots, but as the moment courts rediscovered why controlled human record-keeping existed in the first place.
Because in law, confidentiality is not created by microphones.
It is created by boundaries.
And someone must stand at the line.
Disclaimer
This article is for informational and educational discussion only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws and privilege determinations vary by jurisdiction and specific facts. Attorneys and legal professionals should evaluate their own workflows and consult qualified counsel or applicable court rules before relying on any technology discussed.
Just started this project… https://ocrecordlegallivespeech.learnworlds.com/pages/home
Warm regards,
Denise
Official Court Record http://www.ocrecord.com/Reporter Services Rates <a href="http://www.denisepaddockcsr.com/reporterservices/servicerates.html" rel="
California Court Approved Los Angeles and Riverside List Official Certified Court Reporter | Orange County Superior Court Contract Reporter
Trials, Hearings, Mediation, Arbitration, Depositions | In-Court Onsite and Virtual Remote Realtime
Canada Government Approved Official Court Reporter
LikeLike