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Does Al Need Dog-Walkers? The 'Human In The Loop' Vacuum

DataQuest

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September 2022

Supervision, context-mapping, interference, guidance, ethical compass - there's a lot that humans are needed for when we deploy Al. But what kind of humans? Are they enough? And would they matter?

Does Al Need Dog-Walkers? The 'Human In The Loop' Vacuum

The neighbourhood park tells it all. Look at an old person sitting on the bench. There is a reason why that grandma looks down upon new stuff. It's not always due to resistance or hatred. It's more out of hesitation and confusion. And out of the fear of being irrelevant.

But this park also has a dog-walker. Patiently or grudgingly, holding the leash. Waiting for the pet to do its job. And not far away somewhere, standing next to a swing, is a parent or a Big Brother/Sister watching over a young sibling - making sure they do not run too fast in their excitement to play.

As Al tackles criticisms about being easily prone to bias, accidents and lack of context; there is an unmistakable, and strong, case being made for 'humans in the loop'. Specially as Al, in some cases, is still a dog that needs its owner about. Yet, in some cases, it is a confident child that should better not be interrupted as s/he swings towards the sky.

The question about a 'human in the loop', hence, boils down to this-is it just a helpless-clueless grandma looking for being useful in a strange world or a super-granny whose wisdom is still precious and indispensable? How helpful would the human in the loop' part be? And who are these 'humans'? Where are they? And what do they need to learn?

TOO YOUNG TO BE LEFT ALONE

We all have heard enough stories, read enough opinions and interpreted enough findings to comprehend that even the best of algorithms are not free of in-built, and unintentional, prejudice. We have seen how even the most sophisticated Al systems can fall flat in the real arena. They are stripped of context, and starved of the human discretion. Discretion that can bring precious value due to years of intuition and reflexes that have been built over years of experience.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE DataQuest

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Polyglot Persistence- Not just an exotic idea anymore

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time to read

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Bright frogs, Monarch butterflies, Black-yellow bees and industrial automation- same thing?

As counter-intuitive as it may sound- Is automation a stupid loud colour to wear that attracts predators because of bigger attack surfaces or is it strangely-aposematic enough to tell the bad actors - stay away? Specially when security is baked in and bold- and ready for any camouflage? And what happens when Quantum and third-party supply chains make their way into industrial forests? We may not have all the answers but how about a purple-team approach to begin with.

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How Nagarro bridges the gap between AI ambition and enterprise reality

Nagarro's Viyom Jain explains how ambition meets reality in enterprise AI, and why trust, culture, and human context matter as much as algorithms.

time to read

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January 2026

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Food fraud, shortage and wastage – on the chopping block

Can, and how would, technology (like Blockchain, IoT, AI) help in bringing us food that is transparent, clean-labelled, free of stuff we don't really want and made as per one's own palate? Darshan Krishnamurthy, Co-founder & CTO, Khetika shows us the ingredient-section in detail.

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AI is not Valyrian. It's the new English.

While it may still be too early for people to say 'Avy jorrāelan' to a technology that is affecting their jobs in more ways than one, it is better if we face our fears with clarity, caution and confidence. How does that advice play out in a function that, itself, decides who works and where?

time to read

6 mins

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Lou Gerstner, architect of IBM's turnaround, dies at 83

Arvind Krishna, IBM's CEO, confirmed in an official message to employees that Lou Gerstner, IBM's Chairman and CEO from 1993 to 2002, has died. He was 83.

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India's third tech wave: Tech predictions 2026 through an impact lens

Post-Y2K scale and the 2010s cloud era reshaped Indian tech. In 2026, ΑΙ becomes the third wave, separating hype from outcomes, pivots, and trust.

time to read

4 mins

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Top Tech Predictions 2026: The Lighthouse View

Spoiler-alert first- there is nothing new or plot-changing that is visible on the 2026 horizon. But a lot of new and big ships would be building pace on the waves that were built last year. And, perhaps, in new directions.

time to read

9 mins

January 2026

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Tata Communications' Andrew Winney on why SASE is now non-negotiable

Andrew Winney of Tata Communications explains why perimeter security is broken, how SASE enables Zero Trust at scale, and what CISOs must prioritise next.

time to read

6 mins

January 2026

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Tiny AI: The new oxymoron in town? Not really!

So far everything about AI has been BIG! Huge hype, gigantic investments, massive bets and colossal infrastructures. Despite all that, there is talk about Tiny AI. Or shall we say, because of all that.

time to read

7 mins

January 2026

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