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by wizeman
1251 days ago
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> So it should be allowed to implicitly trained to favor one political view over another? > There's no way to avoid the bias, How about collecting a representative sample of all data for your training data? Or at least, trying to do that as best you can. Saying "there's no way to avoid the bias" is just an excuse to get away with being biased, in my view. |
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Let's say that white nationalism is a tiny fraction of ideas online. Significantly less than 0.1%. Now, you randomly sample the internet and do not collect this idea into your training set. Do you adjust your approach to make sure it's represented (because as reprehensible as it is, it is the reality of online discourse in some places?)
I genuinely believe that it's all going to be biased -- there are no unbiased news or media outlets -- and the sooner you recognize everything is biased, the sooner you can move on to building the tools to recognize and understand that bias.
Asking "why can't we strive to build an unbiased outlet" is to me like asking "why can't we build a ladder to the moon". It's an interesting question, but ultimately should lead you to "Well, why do you want that, and your approach is impossible but the outcome you want might not be."