|
|
|
|
|
by mistermcgruff
4175 days ago
|
|
Hey, author here. It does sound kinda bigoted, doesn't it? Lemme clarify. I would really love for more people to learn this stuff. Truly. That's why I wrote a book to teach it to folks in Excel. What freaks me out a bit is that in order to enlarge the ML pie, a lot of vendors are trying to democratize machine learning not by teaching it to more people but by putting the gun in hands of folks who don't actually understand how supervised machine learning works and where it can go wrong. I don't think people need PhDs to learn or do this stuff. But I think they need more than a "machine learning made easy!" app and a gung-ho attitude. I feel that I'm halfway between main street and an ivory tower...not sure where that puts me. The upstairs bar at a pizza parlor? |
|
Lately there's been a big thrust in my industry to do just what you're worried about, and now that I've started to get an inkling of what's going on under the hood with predictive modeling tools over the past couple years it's starting to worry me.
And I'm starting to find their sales pitches to be even more condescending. "Don't worry about how this works or what it's really doing. Just pretend it's magic." It doesn't speak well for the vendors' opinion of their customers, and it leaves a lot of room open for legitimate technology to morph into silicon snake oil.