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Old 06-05-2012, 11:19 AM   #457
skinsguy
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Re: Trayvon Martin Case

Quote:
Originally Posted by RedskinRat View Post
So how does that make my statement 'not true'? It just takes unbiased programming.
Let me say this again, because I don't think you were able to grasp the concept. The programmer's only source of data to use for such a program would be prior trial outcomes, convictions or what not. Realistically, where else do you think he or she is going to get the data? A programmer is not trained to be a judge, he or she is trained to be a computer programmer; therefore, it does not matter the bias of the programmer. Law is not simply "If variable Outcomes = Array[1], then Boolean variable = True, otherwise false." Simply saying, person A shot and killed person B, therefore person A is guilty. It would be much more complicated than that, and I am afraid that you're on the borderline of thinking in fantasy world rather than realistic logic.



Quote:
Originally Posted by RedskinRat View Post
A computer has a far better sense of human feedback than a human does and would be impervious to human flaws. It would also be completely impartial, in fact.
A computer only does what the programmer and or end user tells it to do. This is fact. A computer cannot think for itself. It must follow a list of commands. Please think in terms of real life, not Star Trek.


Quote:
Originally Posted by RedskinRat View Post
That's why they get paid the big bucks.
Programmers get paid to program, not to become legal judges.



Quote:
Originally Posted by RedskinRat View Post
Which over time would correct the erroneous and biased prior verdicts.
No. Over time, the program would continue to use the same criteria that the programmer hard coded into the system. The computer does not suddenly decide that it no longer needs criteria previously built in its arrays and decides it's going to break out on its own. Either the programmer or someone else, would have to decide that the data should be replaced by outcomes saved into new databases, which would still need the use of a human response determining what is accurate data and what is not. A computer cannot determine it, it can only determine data based on the commands it was told to perform. Nothing more and nothing less.
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