Several iPhone users on Tuesday learned that when they tried to voice-dictate the word âracistâ into their phones, the word âTrumpâ flashed in its place momentarily.
Cowboy State Daily reporters observed the phenomenon on their own phones as well.
Apple vowed to fix the issue, telling media outlets, âWe are aware of an issue with the speech recognition model that powers dictation and we are rolling out a fix today.â
The word âTrumpâ flashed for other words that sound similar to âracistâ â ârampantâ and ârampageâ - but not nearly as frequently as it did for âracist,â in Cowboy State Dailyâs experiments with the phenomenon.
Wyomingâs two U.S. senators, both Republicans, criticized the issue as appalling.
"The recent so-called glitch in Appleâs software is both appalling and alarming," wrote Sen. John Barrasso in a Tuesday email statement to Cowboy State Daily. "It needs to be corrected immediately. Apple owes President Trump and the American people a formal apology.â
Sen. Cynthia Lummis cast the issue as a partisan breach into widely used tech software.
âIf Big Tech is allowing such brazenly partisan and fundamentally untrue âupdatesâ to slip into their software, that is not just an egregious oversight but sets a dangerous precedent,â Lummis told Cowboy State Daily in a Tuesday statement.
Rep. Harriet Hageman did not immediately respond to email inquiries.
One Wyoming-based user of X.com, formerly Twitter, took to the keyboard to bash the tweak as well.
âHey, Tim, wtf is this?â the user asked of Apple CEO Tim Cook, with a video of the phenomenon attached under the post. âIf I use speak to text, it tries to change the word âracistâ to âTrump.â
Because People Keep Saying Racist
Itâs unclear if the racist-to-Trump issue was a glitch or a prank. Several media outlets called it a âbug.â
Appleinsider.com theorized Tuesday that the issue stems from so many people calling Trump a racist, and machine-learning algorithms leaning into those prolific patterns.
On-device dictation is run by machine-learning algorithms that rely on pattern matching, says the story.
âIn the decade Donald Trump has been in the (political) public eye, there has likely been an increase in the word âracistâ appearing near âTrump,ââ the page reported. Â
âIf the word association occurs enough, it may tilt an algorithm one way,â it adds.
Apple told the New York Times the issue was related to a phonetic overlap between the two words.
John Burkey, founder of Wonderrush.ai, told the outlet it could have been a prank inserted into the system.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.