Research Standards
How Aidicia approaches source-linked, human-reviewed AI-law research as an educational portfolio.
Educational research portfolio
Aidicia is an educational AI-law research portfolio written by Muhammad Tariq, a JD Candidate. It is designed to organize complex legal developments for learning and issue-spotting — not to provide legal services.
Not legal advice
Nothing on Aidicia constitutes legal advice, creates a lawyer-client relationship, or replaces consultation with a licensed attorney. Users should consult qualified counsel for legal matters.
Law student authorship
Aidicia is curated by a law student conducting structured legal research. The author is not a licensed lawyer, attorney, expert, consultant, or advisor.
Sources must be verified
Public content is organized around source-linked research discipline. Placeholders, sample tracker entries, and unverified citations should not be treated as legal authority.
Last updated and last reviewed dates
Fast-moving AI-law topics include last updated and last reviewed timestamps where available. Stale or shifting developments may be flagged for re-review.
Selected summary, not complete analysis
Public pages show selected educational research summaries. They do not represent exhaustive legal analysis, complete source records, or final legal conclusions.
Human-reviewed before publication
Content is reviewed by the curator before publication using a citation-first, source-grounded workflow. Future assistant features are planned as retrieval-limited tools — not open-ended legal generators.
Consult licensed counsel
Organizations, lawyers, and individuals should consult licensed counsel before relying on any research summary for compliance, litigation, contracting, or employment decisions.