I don’t think that’s true! IIUC the protections from that act only apply to a subset of humans, including us military and nato military members. It’s in the article you linked! So if you see Putin at your local Safeway go ahead and citizens arrest him :)
Is the goal here to make money? Engineer #25 will get at most .3% equity. At a billion dollar valuation that's 3 million, which sounds like a lot, but if you see that exit after 5 years, that's more like 600k a year. Senior eng at Fang makes 400k+, and is much more attainable than first 50 at big company. You'll have a much better chance climbing FAANG ladder if you want to make a bunch of money
I know this because I worked as an ML engineer at an extremely successful company that automated medical coding using deep learning.
The confusion stems from conflating a "perfect solution" with a "human augmented" one.
90% of coding cases are trivial, have low value and can be done by a model. 10% are really subtle and need human expertise.
That's fine. You can make a billion dollar company on low hanging fruit. I think it's best not to conflate the perfect solution with a very good solution.
You've not refuted the article so much as pointed out a corner case the author didn't address in which ML is a good fit. Your example, using ML to perform the medical coding function, is using a data source (in this case the EMR) for one of the purposes for which it was explicitly designed and for which it is (arguably) non-deficient. That is a realm not doomed to failure.
The realm doomed to failure is using a data source for a completely oblique purpose for which it is horribly distorted. Namely, the purpose of optimizing individual and public health by discovering guidelines and treatments, diagnosing illness, and delivering optimal care.
(Of course medical billing as an enterprise shouldn't even exist, but that is another topic.)
Medical coding is mainly billing with ICD-10 codes for diagnoses and CPT + HCPCS codes for procedures. However, there is also non-billing clinical coding for things like LOINC, SNOMED CT, and RxNorm.
What was was the criterion that you were optimizing? Currently hospitals try to assign codes in a way that maximizes payouts from insurance companies while avoiding straight up lying in a way that could cause them problems. So they'll handle that 10% by choosing the codes with the bigger payout.
I don't have a nuanced thought to add. I think it sucks these videos were demonetized and I agree there's something weird going on when 3d bust test prints abound. Sorry you have to fit so hard to get people on the same page
I don't think that's true. As a consumer I pay Uber, that internally splits its revenue between unionized and non unionized labor. Both parties want money, and the both charge me for it.