


13 November 2025
During a recent discussion on legal ethics and the use of AI, DivinaLaw Partner Atty. Jay-r C. Ipac shared his opinion on having AI as co-counsel.
“When I say ‘co-counsel,’ it means one that you can responsibly rely upon and expect accuracy in the results. I find no problem in allowing a [practitioner] to use AI as ‘co-counsel’ if that [practitioner] 1) knows how to use the technology itself, and 2) has a certain degree of expertise over the questions he is asking. Prompting itself is an art. What are the right words, the nuances, the necessary follow-up questions? You should have the lawyer’s eye to be able to see through the inaccuracies.”
“The lawyer of the future is not one who does not use ChatGPT or GenAI. The good lawyer is someone who knows how to use it but also knows how to lawyer effectively without using it,” said Atty. Ipac.
Atty. Ipac was one of the featured speakers on the first day of the Legal Education Technology and Inclusion Summit held in Manila. Running from November 13 to November 14, 2025, the groundbreaking summit brought together legal educators, students, technologists, and advocates to explore the future of legal education through the lens of innovation and inclusion.
The event was organized by the Legal Education Board, in partnership with University of Santo Tomas (UST), UST Faculty of Civil Law, and the UST Graduate School of Law.
Atty. Ipac is a litigation lawyer and also spearheads the Technology practice of the Firm. As a Chevening Scholar, he obtained his Master of Laws in Information Technology and Intellectual Property Law from the University of East Anglia in United Kingdom where he graduated with distinction. Atty. Ipac obtained his Juris Doctor from the University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Civil Law and graduated as class salutatorian.