16
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] knightly@pawb.social 3 points 17 hours ago

I disagree.

Given the error rate of so-called "AI", all 5 million of those documents must still be checked by a human for accuracy.

It'd be far more efficient to simply pay people to do the work in the first place than to pay for "AI" to do the work and also paying people to check it.

[-] just_another_person@lemmy.world 5 points 17 hours ago

Humans will have to verify, of course. "AI" is just a really fast sort. This is fine for that with human annotators. Could have just saved a bunch of money by grepping the fucking text for keywords though.

[-] knightly@pawb.social 1 points 16 hours ago
[-] Lugh@futurology.today 1 points 17 hours ago

Surely highlighting 5 million out of 24 million is more efficient than checking them all?

[-] knightly@pawb.social 2 points 16 hours ago

If you don't care about false negatives, maybe.

[-] psud@aussie.zone 2 points 7 hours ago

There are only so many historical synonyms for black people, racist language should be searchable with few false negatives

[-] Lugh@futurology.today 2 points 16 hours ago

false negatives

I don't get your logic here either. A false negative would have zero implications for anyone. It would have no legal standing or relevance.

[-] knightly@pawb.social 2 points 16 hours ago

A false negative would have zero implications for anyone. It would have no legal standing or relevance.

I don't understand, in what way does allowing a racist deed covenant stand unchallenged have zero implications or relevance?

If it did, then what would be the point of rooting them out in the first place?

[-] ShellMonkey@lemmy.socdojo.com 2 points 16 hours ago

A false negative would, as I'm understanding the goal here, be a case where the AI missed an existing problem.

It wouldn't change the current state so it wouldn't actively hurt anything though, and of course it's plenty likely a human checker would have overlooked those misses and more.

this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2024
16 points (94.4% liked)

Futurology

1735 readers
70 users here now

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS