I have recently seen CEOs, whose profession was as an attorney with no visible technical expertise, espouse the technical competence in their respective companies. Now in my opinion and my experience, attorneys are good at one thing, and generally one thing only, namely defending their clients interest. They are for the most part in my opinion and my experience competent as to the details of their company. My only exception is my late boss and partner, Gus Hauser, who could disembody any technology and repackage it to be infinitely better. But alas that is just one person.
Now my current examples come from the autonomous vehicle craze and the electrical power distribution. In the vehicle case I would be terrified in such but the lawyers CEO asserts I should have no fear. However facts may contradict that. Second, another lawyer asserts that AI will optimize electrical power distribution networks. Here I know a bit more and engineering them demands two things. First as set of system requirements, most of which are absent from the data sets used by AI. Some data sets are even contradictory. Second, it demands advanced engineering constructs which again may be lacking in past data sets.
Thus can one trust the pontifications of these attorneys? In my opinion and my experience, highly doubtful!


