For me, this isn’t about making SIAI transparent; it does quite enough in that regard. It’s about stopping an information cascade genie that’s already out of the bottle.
Let me put it this way: right now the ratio of “relying on the assumption of mini-camp’s success for decision making” to “available evidence for its success” is about 20-to-1. As I warned before, it’s quickly becoming something “everyone knows” despite the lack of evidence (and major suspicions of many people that it wouldn’t succeed going in). And that believe will keep feeding on itself unless someone traces it back to its original evidence.
It doesn’t reassure me that I’m told I have to keep waiting before anything’s conclusive, yet they can declare it a success now.
I just want the reliable evidence they claim to have, rather than just dime-a-dozen self-help testimonials. They collected hard data, and I gave them a list of things they could provide that are easy to gather and don’t compromise privacy, and are much more likely to be present if the success were real than if it were not. Even after AnnaSalamon’s circling of the wagons I don’t see that.
For me, this isn’t about making SIAI transparent; it does quite enough in that regard. It’s about stopping an information cascade genie that’s already out of the bottle.
Let me put it this way: right now the ratio of “relying on the assumption of mini-camp’s success for decision making” to “available evidence for its success” is about 20-to-1. As I warned before, it’s quickly becoming something “everyone knows” despite the lack of evidence (and major suspicions of many people that it wouldn’t succeed going in). And that believe will keep feeding on itself unless someone traces it back to its original evidence.
It doesn’t reassure me that I’m told I have to keep waiting before anything’s conclusive, yet they can declare it a success now.
I just want the reliable evidence they claim to have, rather than just dime-a-dozen self-help testimonials. They collected hard data, and I gave them a list of things they could provide that are easy to gather and don’t compromise privacy, and are much more likely to be present if the success were real than if it were not. Even after AnnaSalamon’s circling of the wagons I don’t see that.
I think this is largely a case of people reading different things into ‘success’.