"Watson couldn't distinguish between polite language and profanity ...
Ultimately, Brown's 35-person team developed a filter to keep Watson from swearing ..."
Sounds just like what happens when you raise kids. "Daddy why is XXX a good word but YYY a bad word?"
The refrigerator was old and the shelf brackets worn to the point where from time to time they would detach themselves from the door. I arrived home late - I was working long hours, and was fetching my dinner.
Opened the door. Jars and cans and bottles spilled out on the floor.
"Shit!"
From the bathtub I hear my two year old son admonish, "Don't use that word."
It's a great memory, but I still wonder why he learned that lesson so thoroughly at daycare.
Watson couldn't distinguish between polite language and profanity ... Ultimately, Brown's 35-person team developed a filter to keep Watson from swearing ...
It's too bad Urban Dictionary doesn't let users vote on how vulgar they think the dictionary entries are. I've got that feature on The Online Slang Dictionary, but since UD is so much more popular, they could collect that much more data.
Sounds just like what happens when you raise kids. "Daddy why is XXX a good word but YYY a bad word?"
"It just IS. Don't say that word again."
"Ok Daddy" (kid adds word to internal blacklist)