Prem Kurian Philip

24 Followers
42 Following
125 Posts

Software architect, IT nerd. Social entrepreneur.

I work with a bunch of amazing people as we help farmers and other rural producers get access to markets in the cities.

RT @[email protected]

Shockingly & unbelievably wicked. Dressing up as Muslims and pelting stones to give protests a bad name. https://twitter.com/DilliDurAst/status/1207929121633751040

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/sagarikaghose/status/1207944436191117312

Shivam Vij on Twitter

“BJP workers arrested in Bengal for taking to violence — they dressed up with skullcaps and lungis to appear Muslim https://t.co/4yfJc1K8nV”

Twitter

When every check and balances created by our Constitution failed us, we never reacted & silently suffered the brutality!

Politics degraded as cattle trade and it is revelled as Chanakya strategy by opinion makers!

How can we point fingers at the young for our slave mentality

@ConradBarwa Not just a mass murderer but one who allowed gang rapes of even children and then placed many of those who were involved in positions of power
@Snehal_rasal @musafir Absolutely shameless president. A real disgrace to the position that he holds
A truly inspiring story of journalistic enterprise and commitment in #CAB -hit NaMo times from Frontline's Sushanta Talukdar: He somehow managed to dictate the entire story to his son in Jodhpur. The son accessed his father's email to file his copy. Read it in forthcoming @frontline_india
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Talking about AI, isn't it about time we replaced the current Indian president with a script which just hits a rubber stamp?
@aashiks @praveen Zainep's approach uses AI which has its problems in a legal scenario. Decision trees are already being used in legal scenarios and it is a lot easier to tell how a decision was arrived at:
http://settlementperspectives.com/2009/01/decision-tree-analysis-in-litigation-the-basics/
Settlement Perspectives | Decision Tree Analysis in Litigation: The Basics

Decision Tree Analysis in Litigation: The Basics

@aashiks @praveen A fully open source solution where the rules are human readable and clear and which can be tested should work ok. Also, this is just a decision support system. The judge ultimately decides on the judgement.

There are a number of existing opensource rules engines. Ex: Drools.

@aashiks @praveen We don't necessarily need an AI driven system.. A simple system which processes a decision tree based on a rule engine should be sufficient.
@obscurosaur @sanjayuvacha The system could function like a decision support system which advises the judge/jury but the ultimate judgement will come from a human. This is similar to the decision support systems used in other areas - example, in healthcare.