Has “Made By Humans” Come To Denote Quality?

Midway through a podcast, a high-energy commercial chirps out all the advantages of using a particular learning system for languages. They are familiar: Babbel can get you conversing in just three weeks, it teaches you phrases you’ll actually use in the real world, lessons are designed to help you remember.

Then a less familiar selling point:

“Other learning apps use AI for their lesson plans, by Babbel lessons were created by over 100 language experts.”

The company magazine website explains further,

“Babbel’s lessons aren’t the result of an algorithm or computer program; they’re designed by real humans. Babbel’s Didactics Team, made up of more than 100 linguists and language experts, puts a lot of time and care into creating lessons that will actually work for you.

Babbel Magazine

This framing of human input as a kind of quality standard isn’t new — in this case the online article was posted in 2017 — but it is becoming increasingly prevalent.

A quick sweep surfaces this recruitment startup that heavily promotes the fact it doesn’t use AI to make predictions. This community of therapists that promises it won’t use algorithms to match clients with professionals. This news rating service. This social network that uses its rejection of algorithms and ads as its USP.

Additionally, there are too-many-to-mention dating websites, subscription services, ad sales, financial managers, and staffing agencies that state outwardly on their websites that they do not use AI or algorithms to do their work. The message is very clear. These companies want to emphasize that they don’t palm-off the most artful part of their business to unthinking systems. They employ experts to carefully consider the task at hand based on their experience and, perhaps, intuition.

“Made by humans” denotes a quality product.

In a world full of sparkle-toothed AI salesmen peddling their wares at (virtual) conferences, shouting about data being “the new oil” and offering to open the magic gates for businesses looking to dig themselves out of a pandemic pit, this is an interesting development. There is room in this world — perhaps ample room — for artisanal old humans and their semantic knowledge.

Copyright: The Simpsons

Is this indicative as a kind of backlash? A shift to privilege connoisseurs and subject matter experts? Well, the short answer is “unlikely.” Artificial intelligence is still a solid way for businesses in all industries to make efficiencies, streamline procedures, and generally speed things up. Indeed, it’s mostly excellent at this. What it may demonstrate is that there really is space for both organic and silicon brains and — far from being outmoded — the stock of soft skills and experience is actually on the rise.

Data scientists and computer engineers may not inherit the earth after all.

We’re often told that for all the work AI takes from humans, it will also create a vacuum to be filled by new roles and services predicated on human talent. That these AI-less companies are shouting from the rooftops about their human creds suggests that we biological workers have good reason to be optimistic.

30 thoughts on “Has “Made By Humans” Come To Denote Quality?

  1. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – NewsForTime

  2. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ - blacktechdaily.com

  3. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – BlockChain News

  4. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – Top Feed

  5. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ - World News

  6. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – My Hobby Site

  7. Pingback: 'İnsanlar tarafından yapılmış', 'yapay zeka tarafından yapılmış' olmaktan daha mı çekici? | CEO Gelişim

  8. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – VASB NEWS

  9. Pingback: Is ‘made By Humans’ Extra Interesting Than ‘made By AI?’

  10. Pingback: Is ‘made by way of people’ extra interesting than ‘made by way of AI?’ | Kashmir Broadcasting Corporation

  11. Pingback: 「AI製」よりも「人間製」の方が魅力的ですか? | PCジサクテック

  12. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – Londonchiropracter.com

  13. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – TECHOSMO

  14. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ | go U.S. News

  15. Pingback: Is ‘made by people’ extra interesting than ‘made by AI?’ – Gsensenews

  16. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – DLSServe

  17. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – iPongo NEWS

  18. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – Squeaky News

  19. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – Dine.ga

  20. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ more appealing than ‘made by AI?’ – Top Class Gadget

  21. Pingback: Is ‘made by humans’ extra interesting than ‘made by AI?’ Breaking News | PRESSaggregate

  22. Pingback: Automatización y calidad » Enrique Dans

  23. Pingback: Automatización y calidad – Celulares, smartphones y tablets

  24. Pingback: Is It Time To Question Our Assumptions About Hand-Made Vs Machine-Made? – Karamel Mall

  25. Pingback: Is It Time To Question Our Assumptions About Hand-Made Vs Machine-Made? - Topclassicnews

  26. Pingback: Is It Time To Question Our Assumptions About Hand-Made Vs Machine-Made? | We Heard

  27. Pingback: Is It Time To Question Our Assumptions About Hand-Made Vs Machine-Made? - Idiocracy News Media

  28. Pingback: Is It Time To Question Our Assumptions About Hand-Made Vs Machine-Made? - Enri$hed Feed

  29. Pingback: “人類製造”比“人工智能製造”更具吸引力嗎? – 創科技新聞

  30. Pingback: Is It Time To Question Our Assumptions About Hand-Made Vs Machine-Made?

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s