This Show
Finch best dad or bestest dad?
At least he left this one alive.Pretty awful dad since he purposely gave his child severe anterograde amnesia
Accurate assessment...Comparison with the latest episode of Game of Thrones:
Person of Interest had the better resurrection scene of this week.
In true POI form, they don't show how they got out of the firefight cliffhanger ending.
They don't even show when they split up!
Best left up to the imagination. They were pretty much up against an army. Plus, the intro of the episode (after Root's intro) is so damn good as it is.
As much as I love the series, I can't get over how unconvincing the Samaritan bug is.
Why couldn't Samaritan manually track the Team from the first time? Why can't it create an algorithm that notifies it of any unidentifiable suspects when it shows up, since the Team and very few others would not be in it's massive data bases?Why can't it mark the faces it sees, despite being unidentifiable as themselves, with a special tag that designates them as the team?
I'm not going to be too hard on it, because it is an engine for good storylines. The team lives in a Samaritan's world while thriving within the cracks. That's a pretty good set up. And also, I guess the producers didn't want the premise to change TOO much, so they had to have the team seek out people of interest and help them out. Without that, any semblance of PoI as it was before would be gone. And, frankly, I can't think of an especially more convincing way to escape Samaritan's notice. Still, Samaritan's bug seems just so highly fixable.
It is not a bug though. It is a targeted set of implanted sub-directives that seem to affect Samaritan at a very low level.
Essentially, Samaritan knows of a blind spot, but the exact nature of said blind spot explicitly defies analysis.
That said, I do not completely disagree with you...
As much as I love the series, I can't get over how unconvincing the Samaritan bug is.
Why couldn't Samaritan manually track the Team from the first time? Why can't it create an algorithm that notifies it of any unidentifiable suspects when it shows up, since the Team and very few others would not be in it's massive data bases?Why can't it mark the faces it sees, despite being unidentifiable as themselves, with a special tag that designates them as the team?
I'm not going to be too hard on it, because it is an engine for good storylines. The team lives in a Samaritan's world while thriving within the cracks. That's a pretty good set up. And also, I guess the producers didn't want the premise to change TOO much, so they had to have the team seek out people of interest and help them out. Without that, any semblance of PoI as it was before would be gone. And, frankly, I can't think of an especially more convincing way to escape Samaritan's notice. Still, Samaritan's bug seems just so highly fixable.
*Shrug*
Definitely a possibility. If there was foreshadowing to this, I missed it, but it'd be a useful way out. Or better yet, just say that her code allows her a backdoor into Samaritan's brain. Saying that it had more functionality than Root disclosed might be a bit too much of a backtrack, but if they say that it can be repurposed in a way that Root hadn't envisioned until now (as she couldn't have predicted the machine becoming portable), I'd say that's fair game, because it doesn't give the Team an easy answer. The repurpose will still take work to, you know, work.
I don't know if that happens though. From the opening, it looks like the Team got, at best, a pyrrhic victory. "I don't know what victory means anymore" suggests the team didn't get what they wanted, just stopped Samaritan from getting what it wanted.
I fully expect the machine itself to 'die' by the time the series ends..
I fully expect the machine itself to 'die' by the time the series ends.
The question is if Samaritan makes it. And in what form.
Why couldn't Samaritan manually track the Team from the first time? Why can't it create an algorithm that notifies it of any unidentifiable suspects when it shows up, since the Team and very few others would not be in it's massive data bases?Why can't it mark the faces it sees, despite being unidentifiable as themselves, with a special tag that designates them as the team?
Though one has to wonder why they would have hundreds of PS3fats in their warehouse
I fully expect the machine itself to 'die' by the time the series ends.
I suppose the one issue I still have left re: Samaritan and the "saved seven" is the fact that Samaritan has more resources at its disposal now than the Machine's ever had, and is blatantly aware that Root et al. has done something to throw it off of properly identifying them, but still hasn't conceived of any way to circumvent that and set itself back up in such a way that it can target them like it'd want to.
I mean, thinking about some of the tactics the Machine has proven capable of, it recognized the fact that its memories were being reset every day and devised an entire shell corporation around people typing up physical paper-copies of its data that it could read back and reincorporate, it's managed to completely physically relocate itself without either Finch or the US government realizing it, when backed into a corner it managed to remove itself from a singular physical location entirely and somehow moved its entire operation to work via old power lines with specialty boxes installed, and in the most dire of circumstances, super-condensed its core programming down enough to fit into a series of RAM chips stashed in a briefcase. The Machine has been finding ways to reinvent itself and overcome its own shortcomings in the past, why has Samaritan not found similar ways to adapt? Samaritan is the program with access to all the Government's information feeds, at this point it should have the capital to construct a duplicate of itself, import its core algorithms, and then double check the new system's identity database with its current one to root out any outliers. It's shown it can recognize and distribute photographs of "devaints," so why does it not simply retain an image of each Team Machine member and be constantly running facial recognition? That way it wouldn't be trying to seek out "Harold Finch," but rather anybody who matches Harold Finch's image. It knows that it cannot find the team through its own conventional searching functions, so come up with an unconventional way to do it.
Eh, the two scenarios you're comparing (the memory whipe and the blind-spot) aren't really the same thing. The memory whip was never hidden from the Machine, or implemented at a hardware level. The machine knew it had a 24-hour memory, and some point down the line figured out a work-around. But that could have been (and likely was) years for all we know.
Samaritan really has no idea what's going on with itself. It knows it can't find them, but it has literally no idea why. And since the blind-spot exists on both a hardware and software level, and was explicitly written to be hidden from itself, as far as Samaritan can tell everything seems fine on its own end. It has no reason to expect itself to be functioning improperly, so recreating itself is never thought of as a possible fix. The gang's disappearing act may be them hiding or straight up magic, but whatever it is, it doesn't know what. The reason why it doesn't retain photos of them to constantly use, is well, it is doing that. It just doesn't work, because that's the blind-spot in action. Every time it sees the team (outside of sort-of Root), the blind-spot high-jacks the recognition and sends Samaritan back to the false identity. Samaritan is completely incapable of matching them to their real identities, because it just sees "Oh, Det. Stills... Moving on." Wherever the gang exists, Samaritan is just seeing the false identity. Think of it like the digital version of those masks from Mission Impossible.
Eventually though, Samaritan is going to notice enough fuckery with that group of people that it will realize something is going on. Which probably will happen pretty soon.
I could definitely see a Neuromancer ending.
But my personal guess is that both AIs die, but the Machine creates its own child AI.
"SNAFU"
The Machine malfunctions during a reboot and supplies Finch and Root with the numbers of dozens of people not involved in any crimes; Finch and Root are locked out of the Machine as it identifies them as threats.
CBS website shows 10pm EST/9 CST.I'm assuming it's still 9 pm CST, 10 EST.
Fantastic premiere. I'm really loving more of the emotional scenes between Harold and the Machine.