Litigation Specialist - Freelance AI Trainer Project
The Litigation Specialist - AI Trainer role at Invisible Agency offers experienced attorneys the opportunity to shape the future of AI by providing high-quality training data for large-scale language models. These models are evolving from simple chatbots into powerful tools for academic and professional exploration. Your expertise will help power the next generation of AI, democratizing world-class legal education and supporting advanced research and practice across jurisdictions.
In this role, you will engage in substantive legal dialogue with AI models, assessing their responses for factual accuracy and analytical rigor. You will identify reproducible failure points and collaborate with the team to refine prompts and improve evaluation metrics. Your work will involve trial advocacy, motion practice, appellate strategy, evidence handling, procedural analysis, and judicial decision-making, documenting performance gaps to strengthen model reasoning.
A Juris Doctor (JD) and an active law license are required, along with significant litigation experience in trial, appellate, or complex dispute resolution. Ideal candidates may also have a history of publication, prior clerkships, teaching experience, or subject matter specialization. The ability to articulate legal reasoning clearly and precisely is essential.
The compensation for this contract position ranges from $50 to $75 per hour, with the exact rate determined after evaluating your experience, expertise, and geographic location. As a contractor, you will be responsible for providing a secure computer and high-speed internet connection; company-sponsored benefits such as health insurance and paid time off do not apply.
Invisible Agency is committed to building AI tools that support legal professionals and learners worldwide. By joining this project, you will have the opportunity to contribute to the development of AI models that assist with real-world legal reasoning and support advanced research and practice across jurisdictions.