Yes. Brand is held by the customer (an aspect they resonate with). Technically, the "brand" is perceived differently by each customer, which pulls them to the company via a product.
Product comes first. It carries the immaterial value the company holds and expresses the best it can, iteration after iteration.
@elonmusk@iScienceLuvr Researcher <> PhD <> Engineer
This is getting too conflating and lack of humbleness.
We are forgetting about the human element in this. Sadly, it’s been all about moving pixels and atoms.
Research is beyond engineering. Generations beyond.
No. A human making the outcome decision of blocking the money must be accountable for the mishap.
I understand we need to automate outcomes, especially around security. But these tasks should run between two non-human nodes. The moment one of the nodes is a human (for intent or outcome), a human expert has to validate and verify before intending/acting.
Any set algorithms (AI or not) to flag and alert accounts based on anomalies, should be reviewed and acted on by a human for the final outcome—with a measure of risk averseness. At the end, this is a math problem that AI needs to continue being trained on by the continued involvement of the human expert.
https://t.co/F8zFEDt5Xn
Worth watching. "When the cost of answers hits zero, the question becomes everything." Love it!
Here is a different perspective: Think of any tool (such as AI) as a navigation system. When you can already name where you are going, it's effortless... it takes you there. But that was never the hard part. The hard part is when you can't name it yet, in which the system can only offer you options and wait to see if any of them are you.
The question isn't your destination. The question is how you find one you couldn't have known in advance. Most of us reach for a destination we can already state, because stating it feels like relief... something to complete. That relief is the mind wanting to be done.
Stay in the real question, and it doesn't return an answer. It returns more questions, and some you'd never have thought to ask for.
That's why the question is everything. The navigation was never the part that knew where you were going. Neither did you, yet. That isn't a problem to solve. It's the work.
For fun, I call these AI tools "Thought-Assisted Navigation" (TAN) tools.