Is the Official Google Answer to this Controversial Interview Question Correct?

  • Context: Undergrad 
  • Thread starter Thread starter DeDunc
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Google Interview
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
35 replies · 8K views
So DH are you saying, if I take up the bet with him.

a) I would expect to win if I call him on his maths- as the only answer- even in this restricted sense is 0.5

b) I would expect to win if I call him on his interpretation of the problem.

He is offering a quite substantial bet on both options.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You should expect to lose if you take him up on his terms. He has redefined the problem to be something other than that asked by the question. In other words, he is cheating.

Cheating, by the way, is yet another way to make a martingale have an outcome that differs from what probability theory says it should be.
 
Thanks DH

But he says he is willing to make a bet to show that most stats professors will define/interpret the puzzle in the way that he has.

From discussions on here, would you not say I would have more than evens chance of winning
 
If you want to make a bet with him, make a bet with him. But this is starting to turn into "but he said so!".

Let me also point out again that this same argument applies to lottery tickets. I wouldn't try to get $15,000 out of my colleagues, where it's dependent on interpretation. I'd just get it out of the state lottery office, where they cannot argue about whether you are holding a winning ticket.
 
Thanks Guys. Your contributions have been very helpful.

As Vanadium suggests, it does look like a martingale.
 
Last edited: