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Good points.

Personally I'm still basically with Geoff Hinton's early conjecture that people will have to choose whether they want a model that's easy to explain or one that actually works as well as it could.

I'd imagine the really big whiteboard would often be understandable in principle, but most people wouldn't be very satisfied at having the model go "Jolly good. Set aside the next 25 years in your calendar then, and tell me when you're ready to start on practicing the prerequisites!".

On the other hand, one might question how often we really understand something complex ostensibly "explained" to us, rather than just gloss over real understanding. A lot of the time people seem to act as if they don't care about really knowing it, and just (hopefully!) want to get an inkling what's involved and make sure that the process could be demonstrated not to be seriously flawed.

The models are being held to standards that are typically not applied to people nor to most traditional software. But sure, there are also some real issues about reliability, trust and bureaucratic certifications.






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