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8 Dec 2023, 18:59 (Ref:4188671) | #401 | |||
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still not on the side of the FIA tho! far too many tangible examples of how and where they have fallen short of upholding the sporting code imo. it all cant be dismissed as a sign of our times. |
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8 Dec 2023, 19:17 (Ref:4188672) | #402 | |||
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less serious far more cynical answer, i think these fat cats like fancy hotels and free meals too much to stay away from the trappings of Paris life particularly when they are never more than a 1st class flight back home! |
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8 Dec 2023, 20:42 (Ref:4188680) | #403 | |||
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The way MBS appears to be conducting himself is not only clumsy, arcane & classless but is also somewhat reminiscent of Balestre and some other stuffed-shirt, blazer-adorned "leaders" from the past - that approach didn't work then and won't work now. The way that commercially aligned sports run these days is very different and the "governing bodies" from the past aren't always where the real power lies, but "run" the sport and make good revenue from it for their other activities. Max Mosley and Jean Todt understood that and MBS needs to have more acceptance of it as well, or so it seems. |
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8 Dec 2023, 20:43 (Ref:4188681) | #404 | |||
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Being an effective leader in one environment does not guarantee you can do the same in another. Even switching types of businesses (i.e. product to service based) can be a rough road for experienced leaders. Being an effective leader means having a bag full of tools that you can use. But if you have been a plumber all your life, you might be a fish out of water if your next job is electrical work. You will find you can't rely on all of those old tools. You have to learn which old tools still work, which ones to stop trying to use and to develop some new tools as well. Sometimes people can make the transition from one environment to another, some can't. MBS is clearly having a rough time of it. But if he is capable of learning from his mistakes he could get it right. Like I have said earlier, I actually support FIA taking a stronger role. I know people like to complain about the FIA (and they are not perfect), but I do think it is good to have something to balance against the predominantly commercial view that FOM has. Quote:
It is interesting that these recent public battles are less about substance on the surface than maybe appearing to be nothing more than taking opportunities to kick each other in the nuts in front of a crowd of onlookers. Richard |
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8 Dec 2023, 21:01 (Ref:4188684) | #405 | |
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So the answer appears to be nothing happening there??
Or at least the oh, it was only one report on the media, whoops statement as I read it |
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8 Dec 2023, 23:28 (Ref:4188690) | #406 | ||
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Mr Woolf is reported in a few places to be exchanging legal documents with the FIA so the issue isn’t gone yet.
Compensation claim? The other MBS (Mortgage Backed Securities) and their mismanagement arguably caused 2008’s cataclysmic GFC (Global Financial Crisis) This MBS seems perhaps to be trying to out do the impact of that |
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9 Dec 2023, 01:25 (Ref:4188694) | #407 | ||
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According to the last two paragraphs of this article, MBS had a fall and suffered concussion earlier this week, meaning no media conference for him at the FIA awards. Speedcafe is a competent news body so the info is most likely correct.
Makes me wonder if the 2nd part of the FIA / MBS "cunning plan" is to blame the release & investigation on him being concussed at the time that he read the "media" report that started this all? Might give him a way out for his lack of judgement. Or it could simply be a way to avoid being asked obvious questions about the investigation and public release. Will we ever really know (cue twilight zone music). |
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9 Dec 2023, 10:37 (Ref:4188719) | #408 | ||
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The fact that he didn't attend the press conference prior to gala itself, is telling. More telling is that he actually presented the prizes at the gala and chose not to even mention anything about it, probably in the knowledge that Hamilton had, in effect, called for him to stand down from his position.
What struck me immediately when I started reading the articles is why on earth are holding the gala in Baku which meant all the attendees had to fly all the way there, nearly half the world away from Paris, the FIA' headquarters and where most of those attending actually live. And talking about flying, I wouldn't have thought that flying that distance with such severe concussion was the best of ideas, so severe that you cannot attend a press conference. |
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9 Dec 2023, 13:59 (Ref:4188730) | #409 | |||
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9 Dec 2023, 19:34 (Ref:4188747) | #410 | |||
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This man is a clown. It'd be less controversial to reanimate Max Mosley for a return for FIA President at this point. |
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13 Dec 2023, 18:16 (Ref:4188956) | #411 | ||
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13 Dec 2023, 22:14 (Ref:4188966) | #412 | |
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14 Dec 2023, 19:35 (Ref:4189035) | #413 | |||
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More in Autosport today about source of FIA /FOM conflict (in a subscriber-only article so have inserted it here in quote box):
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“We’re far from having too much horsepower…[m]y definition of too much horsepower is when all four wheels are spinning in every gear.” ― Mark Donohue |
14 Dec 2023, 19:44 (Ref:4189036) | #414 | ||
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In the meantime, M. Todt has done an interview and has had a couple of things to say:
Clearly not a fan of MBS & particularly some of the things MBS has said about Todt's presidency. In hindsight, M. Todt thinks that Singapore 2008 should have been cancelled. |
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14 Dec 2023, 19:58 (Ref:4189040) | #415 | ||
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The takeout for me from those articles is that (of course in F1) it appears to be all about money. The current regime at the FIA thinks that it should be making more from the sport - who knows, maybe there's some truth in that?
However, the "bull in a china shop" methodology being used to achieve that is likely to have the opposite effect - keep throwing rocks at people and they'll either put up stronger walls, or lob a few back (or both) but the rock-thrower will find it MUCH harder to get what they want. If the FIA wants more revenue, that can be negotiated in good faith as part of the upcoming Concorde Agreement, no need for all this public stuff, which to me only hurts the image of the sport and does no-one any favours, not FIA in particular but also provides some hurt for the teams & FOM (plus any people caught up in it, such as Susie Woolf) as all this stuff just devalues F1, at least somewhat, out there in the real world. In short, it feels like the FIA is in severe need of an adult or two in the upper echelon of the organisation. |
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“We’re far from having too much horsepower…[m]y definition of too much horsepower is when all four wheels are spinning in every gear.” ― Mark Donohue |
14 Dec 2023, 20:32 (Ref:4189044) | #416 | ||
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a little bit from the above quoted text:
'...he suggested it unfair that the FIA was expected to police things on a ‘shoestring’ considering the billions that F1 was generating.... He added: “We should not be running this big responsibility with a shoestring"...' an interesting assertion there. and one the begs the question about how much of the FIA's responsibility to govern the sport has been compromised by lack of budget? was 2021 a failure stemming from an underfunded support system for the race director? are track limits going unenforced due to lack of budget to adequately monitor? these are important questions because if that is being impacted then what does that mean about their ability to actually monitor the cars? rather, when they say they just look at a sample of a few cars is that really a time concern issue or a funding one? |
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14 Dec 2023, 22:16 (Ref:4189053) | #417 | ||
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I do think that some within the FIA are overlooking the fact that it was never the intention for them to sell the commercial rights to Mr E; that was forced on them by the commissioners of the EU who had threatened that they would enforce it if they didn't do it themselves. Now, we can argue about whether Mr E got a sweetheart deal or not, but the FIA did get $300 million odd from the sale; so where did that money go if they now claim that they are running the show on a shoestring.
And, as with the days of Balestre, F1 teams plus now with FOM, they don't take kindly with diktats from the president of what has become the FIA. It may well be the way that BS conducts himself in his country, but FOM and the teams don't live there., and he needs them more than they need him and the FIA. And he needs to remember that. One has to wonder how much the circuits are expected to pay for things to monitor track limits, for example? Or are the FIA considering setting up their own equipment and moving it around each circuit they visit. That would be a cost, but fairly minimal in the scheme of things. Maybe they could tighten their financial belt a bit, and run everything from their rather expensive building in the centre of Paris. And is AI software that expensive; I would have thought it would be considerably cheaper that employing humans to do the job? Last edited by Mike Harte; 14 Dec 2023 at 22:24. |
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15 Dec 2023, 03:54 (Ref:4189068) | #418 | |||
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15 Dec 2023, 04:29 (Ref:4189069) | #419 | |||
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Todt got his presidency but was largely invisible relating to F1, concentrating on mobility and the auto industry, public relations etc. The sporting side was allowed to morph the way Bernie wanted it. So, hearing Todt reflect on what should have happened in Singapore is just typical of his approach to his responsibility to all the member of the FIA and its associated national bodies. He took this approach to Abu Dhabi 2021, leaving the incoming MBS to try to work it out, even though the incident occurred under Todt's watch. Yes, the championship belongs to the regulator, not the commercial rights holder. But the regulator does not have the resources to regulate in the way that it should be cause previous incumbents gave too much freedom to the commercial rights holder at a cost that benefitted the rights holder, not the regulator. All the rhetoric that is fired at MBS is largely just people upset at him rocking the boat. Whether its Liberty, drivers, teams, managers, or fans, no one wants the gravy train to end or to diminish, even if the MM/BE deal was manifestly an abuse of the rights of the regulator. Greed is like a balloon. The more air it captures the bigger it gets until its overcapacity stretches its skin so far it explodes, and effectively implodes, becomes nothing, and falls into the pit the greedy have been digging for themselves. AI is not the answer for everything. Many believe it is their servant, but AI will be like a mechanical dog, wagging its tail for you. When you least expect it, it will be the A1 tail wagging the dog, and the 'owners' won't know what to do. How long this present situation will continue is hard to predict but F1 is not as healthy as many believe. I doubt if the present balloon will be here in a decade. Maybe, but not much longer than that. Then there will be a reset. Last edited by Teretonga; 15 Dec 2023 at 04:35. |
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15 Dec 2023, 06:26 (Ref:4189073) | #420 | |||
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Richard |
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16 Dec 2023, 02:45 (Ref:4189194) | #421 | |||
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So, at what point does it take the place of consulting doctors, accountants or lawyers? At what point does it take the place of professional people and court judges? Yes. We can use it to judge track limit violations, and probably determine fault in racing incidents, but are we ready to let AI tell us when we are wrong and overrule professional judgement? At what point will we be willing to let AI preside in a courtroom (or steward's room?) and decide who is right and who has violated the rule or law, and what the consequence should be. There are already people in groups of society who want to go there, We could have a very different world in 24-36 months Last edited by Teretonga; 16 Dec 2023 at 03:01. |
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16 Dec 2023, 04:20 (Ref:4189196) | #422 | ||||||
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So today, it is even better. Such as performing radiological analysis of things like mammograms to spot breast cancer. If it can be shown that these systems find things that humans miss, should we ignore those positive and lifesaving results? Again, not saying the given them decision making permission, but alerting. Quote:
It can also go badly wrong using today's technology. Social media platforms (such as Facebook) heavily rely upon AI based moderation to enforce platform rules and what is or isn't acceptable behavior. Anyone who has spent any time in any of these platforms knows that these tools can get it right and also get it badly wrong. And what is sadly a problem is that given the scale of the problem (too much content and not enough humans to provide oversight), sometimes those AI decisions are final. Also, people will use things like Chat GPT and then discover that in fact... it was wrong. The YouTube video below provides one of my favorite example of an attorney who used Chat GPT to do their legal research and it really screwed them up badly. It really is a good video and I can't recommend it enough. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oqSYljRYDEM But there is the larger question of impact on society as these solutions move beyond mostly novel to truly useful (which is happening now). If your job is to stare at a monitor watching one corner for an entire race, then yes, your job is going to be at risk (especially as humans are really, REALLY bad at repetitive tasks like that). My day job is in the IT industry. These solutions today can write good code and do other things that are going to impact that (and other) industries. I suspect that humans will likely end up more as managers for various processes in which they work with AI assistants. My daughter is also in the IT space and she has been using what I would call bleeding edge AI capabilities in her area to do what is effectively "grunt" work and automating it. For her it is not about putting herself or a peer out of a job, but rather increasing her productivity. Quote:
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Richard Last edited by Richard C; 16 Dec 2023 at 04:27. |
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16 Dec 2023, 06:35 (Ref:4189204) | #423 | ||
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Thank you Richard
There are some really good points in there to further my own research and information. |
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16 Dec 2023, 10:19 (Ref:4189210) | #424 | ||
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Just to add a little to Richard's post above, the use of computer learning within the health service here in the UK resulted in significantly better readings for, especially, interpreting mammograms.
Secondly, I am fairly certain that the original reports about the use of AI did state that they would only be used to alert the team monitoring track limit infringements if their was a potential abuse; AI wouldn't be making decisions, human eyes would review the incidents before any action. |
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16 Dec 2023, 11:20 (Ref:4189222) | #425 | ||
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Truth is you really wouldn't want the FIA in charge of anything at all if you had a free choice... |
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