| ▲ | autoexec an hour ago | |
At the same time, do you really want every conversation you have with your doctor recorded, handed over to third party companies, and stored forever with your medical file? Plus what doctor has time to sit down and re-listen to your visit to check to make sure the AI didn't screw up at some point in the future anyway? If your doctor isn't going to be verifying the accuracy from those recordings who would? Overseas contractors? At what point does it become a larger waste of time and money to babysit an incompetent AI than just not using one in the first place? There are some good uses for AI, but I'm not convinced that this (or many other cases where accuracy matters) is one of them. | ||
| ▲ | alterom 4 minutes ago | parent [-] | |
>At the same time, do you really want every conversation you have with your doctor recorded Yes. This is what medical records are. They've been kept by doctors for a reason. It's not like the doctor is talking to you about which anime series are the best. You're talking about your health, your body, your disease, your treatment. It's important to keep track of that. >Plus what doctor has time to sit down and re-listen to your visit to check to make sure the AI didn't screw up at some point in the future anyway No doctor. Which is why it really should be their (or their assistant's) job to record the relevant parts of the conversations. >At what point does it become a larger waste of time and money to babysit an incompetent AI than just not using one in the first place? At this point, as the audit shows. Except the industry (both the AI vendors and healthcare) are going YOLO¹ and relying on AI anyway. ____ ¹ See, you only live once. But there are millions of you. So, like, whatever if you don't. Something something economies of scale to them. | ||