If there isn't anything meaningful in the numbers, why don't they
release them then?  What are they afraid of?

I hope this doesn't mark the beginning of the end of what made Google
great.  They can't even see what they can do with this data.

-Tim

p.s.  I figure if I cause enough trouble, maybe they will hire me. :)



On May 14, 5:19 pm, Izard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> That's their answer:
> "That's unlikely to happen because submissions were rated numerically
> and there isn't meaningful feedback," says Chu from Google.
>
> That's the only communication from Google on the ADC that I think is
> rubbish. I am OK with losing the challenge, and I am fine with not
> receiving the scores. But I think it is weird that someone at Google
> decides that I don't need this these numbers I'd like to use to decide
> how can I improve my application because it is "not meaningful
> feedback". (Don't they mean that numbers are irrelevant?)
>
> Alexander
>
> On May 15, 1:25 am, Tim Wisniewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Google,
>
> > Please create an anonymous corpus (like Netflix) of the judges raw
> > inputs so academics can run statistics and machine learning algorithms
> > on it.  Don't let this valuable data die behind closed doors.  Thanks.
>
> > -Tim
>
> > p.s.  Please release my rank and score in the contest under whatever
> > terms you see fit.
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