FAQs
Common questions related to: Court Lens™ Deep Review (2026): How to Scan a Court Document for Judge-Friendly Key Points
Is Court Lens™ Deep Review legal advice?Open
Is Court Lens™ Deep Review legal advice?
OpenNo. Court Lens™ Deep Review is not legal advice. It is an AI-powered tool that helps you see key patterns and issues in a document so you can think more clearly about preparation. You remain responsible for your own decisions, filings, and strategy.
Educational only — not legal advice.
Will Court Lens™ tell me what a judge will decide?Open
Will Court Lens™ tell me what a judge will decide?
OpenNo. Deep Review is not a prediction engine. It can highlight themes, deadlines, and issues described in the document, but it cannot know how a particular judge, in a particular court, will rule. Use it to organize your thinking, not to forecast outcomes.
Educational only — not legal advice.
Can I copy Court Lens™ key points directly into a declaration?Open
Can I copy Court Lens™ key points directly into a declaration?
OpenYou should always rewrite any AI-generated text into your own words and verify it against the original document before signing anything under penalty of perjury. Court Lens points are suggestions and prompts, not ready-made legal language.
Educational only — not legal advice.
Does Court Lens™ work on any PDF I upload?Open
Does Court Lens™ work on any PDF I upload?
OpenCourt Lens™ Deep Review is designed for text-based court documents such as declarations, motions, responses, and orders. Scanned images may require OCR first. Very poor scans, non-court documents, or documents in unsupported formats may not review cleanly.
Educational only — not legal advice.
What if Court Lens™ misses something important?Open
What if Court Lens™ misses something important?
OpenAI is fallible. Deep Review can miss details or mis-prioritize issues, especially when the underlying document is unclear. That’s why you should treat it as a helper, not a final answer, and always read the document yourself. For serious questions, consult your court’s self-help center or a licensed attorney.
Educational only — not legal advice.
Educational only — not legal advice.

