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<blockquote data-quote="Bob Crowley" data-source="post: 77585689" data-attributes="member: 383390"><p>I have no background in programming (oh, I've taught myself a bit of basic stuff) and I have no qualifications in AI.</p><p></p><p>But recently my wife and I had to do a "Police Check" or "National Crime Check" (NCC) (in Australia) to continue with our volunteer roles in a particular Catholic charity. It's a bit irritating but it's the law. No doubt the pedophile crisis in the Catholic Church had some influence as we sometimes visit or interview families with children.</p><p></p><p>But when we submit our identification details online it's apparently AI that checks them. We've had this issue both of the last two times in that my wife had to show proof of name change (maiden name to married name). We duly sent off a scanned copy of the marriage certificate which was church issued on Commonwealth Stationery, but because it's not an official "State" certificate it bounced back.</p><p></p><p>The AI was following very stringent rules no doubt implemented by a human programmer. "Is document a state document? ... No ... Return to Sender..."</p><p></p><p>In due course we sent a request form back and the checks were completed.</p><p></p><p>But it took human interference to get the job finalised.</p><p></p><p>I'm wondering how they go if AI is involved in designing a nuclear plasma reactor with billions of repetitive equations which humans have no possibility of checking individually. Should they trust the result?</p><p></p><p>Or is there some algorithm that calculates the possibility of error by an AI controlled process?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bob Crowley, post: 77585689, member: 383390"] I have no background in programming (oh, I've taught myself a bit of basic stuff) and I have no qualifications in AI. But recently my wife and I had to do a "Police Check" or "National Crime Check" (NCC) (in Australia) to continue with our volunteer roles in a particular Catholic charity. It's a bit irritating but it's the law. No doubt the pedophile crisis in the Catholic Church had some influence as we sometimes visit or interview families with children. But when we submit our identification details online it's apparently AI that checks them. We've had this issue both of the last two times in that my wife had to show proof of name change (maiden name to married name). We duly sent off a scanned copy of the marriage certificate which was church issued on Commonwealth Stationery, but because it's not an official "State" certificate it bounced back. The AI was following very stringent rules no doubt implemented by a human programmer. "Is document a state document? ... No ... Return to Sender..." In due course we sent a request form back and the checks were completed. But it took human interference to get the job finalised. I'm wondering how they go if AI is involved in designing a nuclear plasma reactor with billions of repetitive equations which humans have no possibility of checking individually. Should they trust the result? Or is there some algorithm that calculates the possibility of error by an AI controlled process? [/QUOTE]
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