714 results for search: %7B%EC%B6%A9%EC%A1%B1%ED%95%9C%20%ED%8F%B0%ED%8C%85%7D%20O6O%E2%96%AC9O2%E2%96%AC8866%20%20%EA%B3%A0%EC%84%B1%EA%B5%B081%EB%85%84%EB%8B%AD%EB%9D%A0%20%EA%B3%A0%EC%84%B1%EA%B5%B081%EB%85%84%EC%83%9D%E2%96%91%EA%B3%A0%EC%84%B1%EA%B5%B082%EB%85%84%EA%B0%9C%EB%9D%A0%E2%96%A9%EA%B3%A0%EC%84%B1%EA%B5%B082%EB%85%84%EC%83%9D%E2%9D%B7%E3%84%88%E6%8E%80dropkick/feed/content/colombia/privacy
Weapons of Math Destruction
Weapons of Math Destruction: invisible, ubiquitous algorithms are ruining millions of lives. Excerpt:
As Patrick once explained to me, you can train an algorithm to predict someone’s height from their weight, but if your whole training set comes from a grade three class, and anyone who’s self-conscious about their weight is allowed to skip the exercise, your model will predict that most people are about four feet tall. The problem isn’t the algorithm, it’s the training data and the lack of correction when the model produces erroneous conclusions.
Sous la dictature d’Hissène Habré, le ridicule tuait
Patrick Ball, un expert en statistiques engagé par les Chambres africaines extraordinaires, a conclu que la « mortalité dans les prisons de la DDS fut substantiellement plus élevée que celles des pires contextes du XXe siècle de prisonniers de guerre ».
Data Mining on the Side of the Angels
“Data, by itself, isn’t truth.” How HRDAG uses data analysis and statistical methods to shed light on mass human rights abuses. Executive director Patrick Ball is quoted from his speech at the Chaos Communication Congress in Hamburg, Germany.
The Forensic Humanitarian
International human rights work attracts activists and lawyers, diplomats and retired politicians. One of the most admired figures in the field, however, is a ponytailed statistics guru from Silicon Valley named Patrick Ball, who has spent nearly two decades fashioning a career for himself at the intersection of mathematics and murder. You could call him a forensic humanitarian.
Calculating US police killings using methodologies from war-crimes trials
Cory Doctorow of Boing Boing writes about HRDAG director of research Patrick Ball’s article “Violence in Blue,” published March 4 in Granta. From the post: “In a must-read article in Granta, Ball explains the fundamentals of statistical estimation, and then applies these techniques to US police killings, merging data-sets from the police and the press to arrive at an estimate of the knowable US police homicides (about 1,250/year) and the true total (about 1,500/year). That means that of all the killings by strangers in the USA, one third are committed by the police.”
