Disregarding the fact that you didn't respond to how the supposed censorship was accidental and hence returning, the obvious response you're looking for would be hyperbolic; something all-encompassing that can't be taken literally since unintentional removal is reversed.
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Replying to @AmazonFCBryan @meedeeums and
Can you speak in more than one sentence? Or better yet, try and provide an answer to my question.
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Replying to @AmazonFCBryan @meedeeums and
No, the learning algorithm needs to learn. You as a dev should understand how learning algorithms operate. They cannot be perfect from the onset, and so mistakes are corrected. They aren't wringing their hands in delight when they have to fix the algorithm's slow learning curve.
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Replying to @NekoBlanchard @meedeeums and
What you're suggesting is akin to an electrical fire burning down a library, and in the interim before the building's books has been replaced people are shouting that their negligence at preventing the fire was blatant censorship despite their efforts correct and rebuild.
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Replying to @AmazonFCBryan @meedeeums and
You must really hate tornadoes, floods, earthquakes, hurricanes and wildfires for all the censoring they do then, huh?
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Replying to @AmazonFCBryan @meedeeums and
The algorithm, obviously, does not intend to remove content that does not invade privacy, threaten, harass nor anything else written within the Terms of Service. You know that a learning algorithm needs to make mistakes to learn, and humans need to correct the mistakes.
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Now if your definition extends to actions upon Terms of Service violations causing true censorship on the vast internet, then that's an entirely different situation to the one H3 was contending with.
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