The court (stenographer) reporter should never ask the judge to instruct anyone in the courtroom to "calm down. " That is not their role. The reporter can and often does ask for someone to slow down or speak one at a time but not calm down.
She/he wouldn't ask that they calm down, they would ask that they slow down. If they are talking over each other they can only get one of them. Otherwise the transcript would be full of "sic"
@@Pntbtrorjly What I said before: 1) The video erroneously claimed that reporters ask for people to "calm down." 2) Reporters ask people to slow down or not talk simultaneously; but it's not up to the reporter to tell anyone to calm down. The transcript would not be full of [sic]s if people were talking too fast and the reporter couldn't keep up. It might be full of errors, but that's not when you use [sic]. Reporters are only supposed to use [sic] if someone said the wrong word(s), for instance, if they said "statute of liberty" instead of "statue of liberty," you would put a [sic] after the word "statute" to show that's what the person actually said.
"Stupid" to you, essential in a court of law. Try getting through Theory by memorizing the blank keyboard/combinations of letters; phrases, then Speed building.
It's kind of important. There was a fairly recent study that showed AI can have a 75 percent WER on people with a high dialect density (AAVE). So if we just leave it up to Siri, there's a great chance of people pleading "knot gill tee."
The court (stenographer) reporter should never ask the judge to instruct anyone in the courtroom to "calm down. " That is not their role.
The reporter can and often does ask for someone to slow down or speak one at a time but not calm down.
She/he wouldn't ask that they calm down, they would ask that they slow down. If they are talking over each other they can only get one of them. Otherwise the transcript would be full of "sic"
@@Pntbtrorjly What I said before:
1) The video erroneously claimed that reporters ask for people to "calm down."
2) Reporters ask people to slow down or not talk simultaneously; but it's not up to the reporter to tell anyone to calm down.
The transcript would not be full of [sic]s if people were talking too fast and the reporter couldn't keep up. It might be full of errors, but that's not when you use [sic].
Reporters are only supposed to use [sic] if someone said the wrong word(s), for instance, if they said "statute of liberty" instead of "statue of liberty," you would put a [sic] after the word "statute" to show that's what the person actually said.
Next time I have a chance, I am definitely asking everybody to just calm down.
What a stupid story wcco is bad
"Stupid" to you, essential in a court of law. Try getting through Theory by memorizing the blank keyboard/combinations of letters; phrases, then Speed building.
It's kind of important. There was a fairly recent study that showed AI can have a 75 percent WER on people with a high dialect density (AAVE). So if we just leave it up to Siri, there's a great chance of people pleading "knot gill tee."
@@ChristopherDayStenonymous
Worse yet, confusing "I did it " with "I didn't."