TRV-2026-0083Version 3 · Certified
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TRUVACE RECORD VERSION record: TRV-2026-0083 version: 3 kind: certified reason: Restored after model confidence scale normalization timestamp: 2026-07-13T00:35:00.854636Z status: published lens: trace sector: sports headline: Rage against the machines: ignore the fury at Wimbledon, AI in sport works | Sean Ingle dek: We are all suckers for a good story. And there was certainly a cracking two‑parter at Wimbledon this year. First came the news that 300 line judges had been replaced by artificial intelligence robots. Then, a few days later, it turned out there were some embarrassing gremlins in the machine. Not since Roger Federer hung up his Wilson racket has there been a sweeter spot hit during the Wimbledon fortnight. First the new electronic line-judging system failed to spot that Sonay Kartal had whacked a ball long during he gain_title: Rage against the machines: ignore the fury at Wimbledon, AI in sport works | Sean Ingle: Another study in Norway found that successful teams were more likely to be given favourable penalty decisions. problem_title: Rage against the machines: ignore the fury at Wimbledon, AI in sport works | Sean Ingle: First the new electronic line-judging system failed to spot that Sonay Kartal had whacked a ball long during her match against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, which led to the Russian losing a game she otherwise would have won. trace_subject: (none) gain_reading: Rage against the machines: ignore the fury at Wimbledon, AI in sport works | Sean Ingle: Another study in Norway found that successful teams were more likely to be given favourable penalty decisions. problem_reading: Rage against the machines: ignore the fury at Wimbledon, AI in sport works | Sean Ingle: First the new electronic line-judging system failed to spot that Sonay Kartal had whacked a ball long during her match against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, which led to the Russian losing a game she otherwise would have won. quick_read: We are all suckers for a good story. And there was certainly a cracking two‑parter at Wimbledon this year. First came the news that 300 line judges had been replaced by artificial intelligence robots. Long ago, researchers estimated that line judges get around 8% of close calls wrong. limitation: Machine-ingested summary: the claims above reflect a single primary source and have not been weighed against contradicting evidence by a Truvace editor yet. tag: Automated dual reading key_points: We are all suckers for a good story. | And there was certainly a cracking two‑parter at Wimbledon this year. | First came the news that 300 line judges had been replaced by artificial intelligence robots. rundown: We are all suckers for a good story. And there was certainly a cracking two‑parter at Wimbledon this year. First came the news that 300 line judges had been replaced by artificial intelligence robots. Then, a few days later, it turned out there were some embarrassing gremlins in the machine. sources: - journalism | The Guardian | https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2025/jul/15/rise-of-the-machines-ai-outrage-technology-tennis-sport | 2025-07-15 prev: 95c78e845a02674a4d1ee85c3a6062a027bef613f25349e92b7abed854ff300f
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