Ask the Mechanical Turk
Nov. 6th, 2007 03:02 pmNow here's a fascinating article: The premise is that you can use Amazon's Mechanical Turk to argue with you. If you're a nerdy reader, you'll already know that the Turk is an automatic job outsourcing engine: it passes small jobs to people who are paid small amounts for usually small efforts. Newsworthy uses include the attempt to find adventurer Steve Fossett's crashed plane in satellite photos: a Turk user would get a photo, and the question "is there any wreckage in this picture?".
What the author has done is ask the Turk to challenge his philosophical argument. He's asked it for the one thing machines really suck at: an opinion. And it turns out he got plenty, which makes me think that this could be a great way to, say, refine a thesis for logical holes, inconsistencies and oversights. The best part is, he got good quality opinions for a dollar a pop, without alienating his friends or drowning in friendly agreement and Usenet-style argumentative biff.
It's still a funny creature, the Turk, but this is a novel use that makes me smile. Now, I don't just have to listen to the voices in my head.
What the author has done is ask the Turk to challenge his philosophical argument. He's asked it for the one thing machines really suck at: an opinion. And it turns out he got plenty, which makes me think that this could be a great way to, say, refine a thesis for logical holes, inconsistencies and oversights. The best part is, he got good quality opinions for a dollar a pop, without alienating his friends or drowning in friendly agreement and Usenet-style argumentative biff.
It's still a funny creature, the Turk, but this is a novel use that makes me smile. Now, I don't just have to listen to the voices in my head.