Chase Hughes
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. I've loved the e-meter concept for a while. I don't think it's extremely reliable for reading human emotion. Right.
Yeah. I've loved the e-meter concept for a while. I don't think it's extremely reliable for reading human emotion. Right.
Yeah. I've loved the e-meter concept for a while. I don't think it's extremely reliable for reading human emotion. Right.
No. No. But, I mean, there are new neural networks that are 98.4% effective at detecting human risk. And they can call you on your cell phone and ask you a yes or no question, and it's 98.4% effective, proven by Carnegie Mellon, proven by the Department of Defense. Disclaimer, I am on the board of that company. But it is scary accurate. What kind of questions do they ask? You can ask anything.
No. No. But, I mean, there are new neural networks that are 98.4% effective at detecting human risk. And they can call you on your cell phone and ask you a yes or no question, and it's 98.4% effective, proven by Carnegie Mellon, proven by the Department of Defense. Disclaimer, I am on the board of that company. But it is scary accurate. What kind of questions do they ask? You can ask anything.
No. No. But, I mean, there are new neural networks that are 98.4% effective at detecting human risk. And they can call you on your cell phone and ask you a yes or no question, and it's 98.4% effective, proven by Carnegie Mellon, proven by the Department of Defense. Disclaimer, I am on the board of that company. But it is scary accurate. What kind of questions do they ask? You can ask anything.
We can use it to find bad guys overseas. We can use it to screen people for job interviews, insurance fraud. We're going to be using it in boxing soon just to ask people, are you doping? Are you blood doping or whatever? Can you pass the test? The system is called Asterisk. Okay. But it can just ask you for โ it's an AI that calls your phone and says, here's the questions you're going to be asked.
We can use it to find bad guys overseas. We can use it to screen people for job interviews, insurance fraud. We're going to be using it in boxing soon just to ask people, are you doping? Are you blood doping or whatever? Can you pass the test? The system is called Asterisk. Okay. But it can just ask you for โ it's an AI that calls your phone and says, here's the questions you're going to be asked.
We can use it to find bad guys overseas. We can use it to screen people for job interviews, insurance fraud. We're going to be using it in boxing soon just to ask people, are you doping? Are you blood doping or whatever? Can you pass the test? The system is called Asterisk. Okay. But it can just ask you for โ it's an AI that calls your phone and says, here's the questions you're going to be asked.
It tells you the questions beforehand. And they're all yes or no. And it asks you four or five yes or no questions. And it's 98.4 plus is what they say in the research, 98.4 percent plus accurate in detecting risk. But it's more like a metal detector at an airport. And because calling something a lie detector is just not โ I don't think it's accurate.
It tells you the questions beforehand. And they're all yes or no. And it asks you four or five yes or no questions. And it's 98.4 plus is what they say in the research, 98.4 percent plus accurate in detecting risk. But it's more like a metal detector at an airport. And because calling something a lie detector is just not โ I don't think it's accurate.
It tells you the questions beforehand. And they're all yes or no. And it asks you four or five yes or no questions. And it's 98.4 plus is what they say in the research, 98.4 percent plus accurate in detecting risk. But it's more like a metal detector at an airport. And because calling something a lie detector is just not โ I don't think it's accurate.
I don't think anything should be called a lie detector. So it's just like when you go to the airport. If the machine goes off, it's almost 100% sure that there's something big and metal on your body. Whether or not it's a belt buckle or an AK-47, it's going to be up to a human. So this AI that we're using is โ directing human attention.
I don't think anything should be called a lie detector. So it's just like when you go to the airport. If the machine goes off, it's almost 100% sure that there's something big and metal on your body. Whether or not it's a belt buckle or an AK-47, it's going to be up to a human. So this AI that we're using is โ directing human attention.
I don't think anything should be called a lie detector. So it's just like when you go to the airport. If the machine goes off, it's almost 100% sure that there's something big and metal on your body. Whether or not it's a belt buckle or an AK-47, it's going to be up to a human. So this AI that we're using is โ directing human attention.
So it's the fastest pathway to identify risk, but it's also the fastest pathway for me to find out if I have a group of a hundred people here, who, who are the, where can I trust? Where can I invest trust the fastest way? So that's what it really is. It's the I don't know how the hell we got it. Oh, the E-meter. Yeah. So I've been obsessed with the E-meter.
So it's the fastest pathway to identify risk, but it's also the fastest pathway for me to find out if I have a group of a hundred people here, who, who are the, where can I trust? Where can I invest trust the fastest way? So that's what it really is. It's the I don't know how the hell we got it. Oh, the E-meter. Yeah. So I've been obsessed with the E-meter.