What the Training Data Can’t See

What the Training Data Can’t See

How dyslexia, neurodivergence, and a sideways way of seeing the world become an advantage in an AI era obsessed with speed, compliance, and clean answers.


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Palantir’s chief executive officer, Alex Karp, said recently that two types of people will thrive in the AI era: those with vocational skills and those who are neurodivergent.

I’m dyslexic. And I have a complicated relationship with that word “thrive.”

Because dyslexia is not a superpower you can switch on. It’s not a productivity hack or a hiring category. Some days it’s the thing that lets you see a pattern no one else can see. Other days it’s the reason a simple email takes four times longer than it should. It’s the reason you avoid certain rooms. The reason you developed instincts that look like confidence but started as compensation.

So when a billionaire CEO frames neurodivergence as a competitive advantage, I get it. And I also don’t. And I say that as someone who does not have much time for Alex or the world he is building. But on this, he’s not far off.

Brandmakers with Paul Ridsdale,  Director of Brand & Marketing at ITV

Brandmakers with Paul Ridsdale, Director of Brand & Marketing at ITV

Listen on Spotify Listen on Apple Music Watch on YouTube And we're back, this week the Brandmakers podcast dives into the world of ITV, a major UK broadcaster and content studio reaching millions of viewers through its channels and ITVX. Its director of brand and marketing, Paul Ridsdale, has been marketing the British broadcaster ITV for over 17 years, and has been a part of its journey from a TV channel to a streaming service and content creator. In this episode, presenter Hannah Bowl


Hannah Bowler

Hannah Bowler