Human Cost
"If a system collapses without human vigilance, it is not a system. It is deferred responsibility."
Automation is often introduced to reduce effort. To remove repetition. To free people from unnecessary labour.
Yet many automated systems do the opposite. They require constant monitoring. They demand standby humans "just in case". They create anxiety rather than relief.
If a system collapses without human vigilance, it is not a system. It is deferred responsibility.
When people are afraid to leave an automated workflow unattended, the automation has not reduced labour — it has relocated it into emotional space.
A correct system does not ask for fear. It creates trust through structure.
When automation increases vigilance instead of safety, the problem is not technical. It is architectural.