• supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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    3 days ago

    My point is if someone handed me a tool that could decisively identify autistic kids from photographs I would destroy it if possible and then and advocate for parents never uploading photos of their autistic kids to the internet.

    There are people in power who would immediately use this tool to do evil things, to seek to create it makes it clear the creators clearly don’t give a shit about any other goal than “I figured something out!” in their research.

    • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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      3 days ago

      The best current treatments for autism depend on knowing as early as possible that a child needs specialized help to have the best outcomes. If there was a tool that decisively identified autistic kids and you destroyed it I would rank you as a particularly heinous monster.

      • TehPers@beehaw.org
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        16 hours ago

        This depends on how the tool is used still. For someone seeking a diagnosis, the tool would be incredible. For someone who wants to use it to discriminate, the tool would be terrible.

        Like most tools, the tool itself isn’t morally right or wrong. It’s the use of the tool that is.

    • BougieBirdie@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      3 days ago

      This tool wouldn’t work very well either. Ignoring the problems of collecting and verifying the validity of the data (and those are pretty big, serious problems), 2,900 images isn’t really enough to train an accurate image classifier. Especially not one that I would be comfortable using in a medical context.

      Using the tool would probably result in a ton of false positives, and I’d bet the model would be overfitted to its data. Of course, I don’t think that would prevent people from using something like that nefariously.

      • TehPers@beehaw.org
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        16 hours ago

        It also wouldn’t work well because it’s impossible to diagnose someone with Autism solely from their face. They’d have much better luck making a tool for something like Down syndrome, but even still it would be very fallible.

        Autism is widely called “invisible” for a reason lol.

    • bmaxv@noc.social
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      3 days ago

      @supersquirrel I agree completely. The intent, setup, participation (including springer nature and everyone who publishes there), isn’t “dumb” though.

      It’s malicious, evil, negligent or whatever you want to call it.

      I dislike “stupid” because it leaves that room for innocent mistakes and unintentional behavior.

      People didn’t care for ethical standards and this is the outcome.