Comment by PoignardAzur
Comment by PoignardAzur 2 months ago
Yeah, but again, the problem isn't the high false positive rate.
The problem is that given any positive at all, the chance it points to a problem is still virtually zero.
If it was 6.8% of all tests as false positives and 2% true positives, probably people wouldn't have silenced the alarm.
If it goes off 8 times a day and 2 of them are true positives, then people have recent memories of having to fix problems pointed by the alarm.