@webframp So not only do I disagree, I think this is one of the great benefits of computerized decision-making.

When a human makes a bone-head call, they can get better but to a certain extent that improvement does not scale. You can teach new people, but they will forever learn their own way and have gaps in their knowledge that we can't know because we can't introspect them.

When a computer makes an erroneous decision, you can pin its innards like a butterfly, understand precisely why it malfunctioned, and rework it. Then copy that change to all instances of it so that mistake *never happens again.*

Unless by "management decision" here they just mean "gut calls." Because computers make management decisions (resource management, allocation, regulation, distribution, action-ordering) all the time in the modern era, to great effect.

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