top | item 40068211

(no title)

cmcollier | 1 year ago

There can be multiple reasons for this[0], including but not limited to:

* The people or industry have low tolerance or fear around risk of false positives

* The industry is centered around billable hours and has no incentive for automation

* The engineers or people perceive ML as this obscure/difficult thing

I'd say the incentives and risks have hindered lots of legal adoption (this is what I observed while working in legaltech for instance). Insurance sounds similar, but I'm less familiar and assume they are coming along more quickly.

[0] I agree with minimaxir's point, that it's a bad assumption to think few teams use basic ML functionality. This will become even more true as emergent tech such as zero shot classification with LLMs becomes more commoditized.

discuss

order

No comments yet.