I assume various businesses insure intermediate goods pretty often? Also, whenever two businesses sign a contract for a big order of e.g. steel, the lawyers spend a bunch of time hashing out who will be liable for a gazillion different kinds of problems, and often part of the answer will be “company X is generally responsible for the bulk of problems, in exchange for a price somewhat favoring them”.
Not sure why this seems so crazy to you, it seems fairly normal to me.
What’s weird about this post is that, until modern DL-based computer vision was invented, this would have actually been an enormous pain—honestly, one that I think would be quite possibly impossible to implement effectively.
Yeah, so that’s a case where the company/consumers would presumably eat the cost, as long as the product is delivering value in excess of the harms.
I assume various businesses insure intermediate goods pretty often? Also, whenever two businesses sign a contract for a big order of e.g. steel, the lawyers spend a bunch of time hashing out who will be liable for a gazillion different kinds of problems, and often part of the answer will be “company X is generally responsible for the bulk of problems, in exchange for a price somewhat favoring them”.
Not sure why this seems so crazy to you, it seems fairly normal to me.
Yeah, so that’s a case where the company/consumers would presumably eat the cost, as long as the product is delivering value in excess of the harms.