Tag: racist

  • Apple’s AI mistakenly transcribes ‘racist’ as ‘Trump’; company pledges to resolve issue

    Apple’s AI mistakenly transcribes ‘racist’ as ‘Trump’; company pledges to resolve issue

    Apple says it is working to resolve an issue with its speech-to-text tool after reports emerged of iPhones transcribing the word “racist” as “Trump.”

    This comes after their speech-to-text tool on iPhones has been mistakenly transcribing the word “racist” as “Trump” before correcting itself. This glitch has caused outrage among Trump supporters and conservative commentators, leading to widespread criticism.

    The tech giant suggested that the error in its Dictation service may stem from a difficulty in distinguishing words containing the letter “r.”

    “We are aware of an issue with the speech recognition model that powers Dictation and we are rolling out a fix today,” an Apple spokesperson said.

    A speech recognition expert has cast doubt on Apple’s explanation for the AI transcription error, calling it “just not plausible.”

    Peter Bell, a professor of speech technology at the University of Edinburgh, suggested that the issue was more likely caused by a deliberate change to the software rather than a simple phonetic mistake.

    Videos circulating online show instances where Apple’s Dictation tool incorrectly transcribes the word “racist” as “Trump” before quickly correcting itself. However, in some cases, the word is transcribed accurately from the start.

    The BBC has not been able to replicate the error, indicating that Apple may have already implemented a fix.

    Prof. Bell challenged Apple’s claim that phonetic similarities caused the mistake, arguing that the words “racist” and “Trump” are not alike enough to confuse an AI system. He explained that speech-to-text models are trained using real speech recordings paired with accurate transcripts, making such an error unlikely.

    They are also taught to understand words in context – for example, they could distinguish the word “cup” from “cut” if it was within the phrase “a cup of tea”.

    Prof Bell says the situation with Apple is unlikely to be a genuine mistake with its data because its English language model would be trained on hundreds of thousands of hours of speech, which should give it a high level of accuracy.
    For “less well-resourced languages” he said it could be an AI training issue.

    But he said in this case: “it probably points to somebody that’s got access to the process.”
    A former Apple employee who worked on its AI assistant Siri told the New York Times: “This smells like a serious prank.”

    Apple recently backtracked on an AI-powered feature following complaints from the BBC and other news organizations. The company suspended its AI-generated news summaries after the tool displayed inaccurate notifications, including a false claim that tennis star Rafael Nadal had come out as gay.

    In a separate announcement, Apple revealed plans to invest $500 billion (£395 billion) in the U.S. over the next four years. The investment will include the development of a major data center in Texas to support Apple Intelligence, the company’s AI-driven technology.

    Meanwhile, CEO Tim Cook indicated that Apple might reconsider its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies following calls from President Donald Trump to eliminate such programs.

  • Former Mississippi officers sentenced to 17.5 years for torturing two Black men in a racist manner

    Former Mississippi officers sentenced to 17.5 years for torturing two Black men in a racist manner

    A third ex-deputy sheriff from Mississippi has been punished for being involved in the racist torture of two Black men by a group of white officers. They called themselves “the Goon Squad. ” Daniel Opdyke was given a 17. 5-year prison sentence on Wednesday.

    Opdyke, who is 28 years old, cried a lot as he talked in court before the judge said what his punishment would be. He looked at the two people he hurt and said that being in prison has given him a chance to think about how he became a bad person that night.

    Opdyke said, “I will feel bad about the things I’ve done every day. ” “I want to make your pain go away. ”

    One of the victims, Eddie Terrell Parker, put his head in his hands, closed his eyes, and then got up and left the courtroom before Opdyke finished talking. The other person, Michael Corey Jenkins, said he felt “hurt” and “embarrassed” by the mean things done to him.

    United States Judge Tom Lee said Opdyke might not have known everything about what it meant to be in the Goon Squad when Middleton asked him to join, but he did know it meant using too much force. “You did not just watch, you were active. ” Lee said that you were involved in the brutal attack.

    All six of the officers admitted that they went into a house without permission and hurt the Black men with a stun gun, a sex toy, and other things. Christian Dedmon, who is 29 years old, was also going to be in prison for a long time when he was sentenced on Wednesday afternoon by Lee.

    On Tuesday, Lee sentenced Hunter Elward, 31, to almost 20 years in prison and Jeffrey Middleton, 46, to 17. 5 years in prison. He said their actions were really bad and awful. They, like Opdyke and Dedmon, used to work as deputies for Rankin County sheriff during the attack.

    Two other men, Brett McAlpin and Joshua Hartfield, are going to be punished on Thursday for their past roles as a deputy and a police officer.

    In March last year, The Associated Press found out that some deputies were involved in at least four violent incidents with Black men since 2019. Two men died and another was seriously hurt. Federal prosecutors announced charges in August.

    The ex-cops stayed with their lie about what happened to Michael Corey Jenkins and Parker for a long time, but then they confessed to torturing them. Elward confessed to pushing a gun into Jenkins’ mouth and shooting it during a “play execution” that went wrong.

    On Tuesday, the United States said. Attorney General Merrick Garland criticized the terrible attack on citizens that police officers had promised to keep safe.

    The frightening thing started in January. On March 24, 2023, a white person in Rankin County complained to McAlpin that two Black men were staying with a white woman at a house in Braxton, and asked for violence against them because of their race. McAlpin told Dedmon to text some white police officers and ask if they could help with something. Dedmon replied and said they should only use force on parts of the body that wouldn’t show in a photo.

    Once they got in, they put handcuffs on Jenkins and his friend Parker. They also poured milk, alcohol, and chocolate syrup on their faces. They made them take off their clothes and shower together to hide the mess. They made fun of the victims by using racist words and surprised them by using stun guns. Dedmon and Opdyke attacked them with a sex toy.

    Elward shot Jenkins in the mouth, hurting his tongue and breaking his jaw. Then, they lied to cover it up by putting drugs and a gun there. Jenkins and Parker were accused of things they didn’t do for many months.

    Rankin County, which is mostly white, is located just east of the state capital, Jackson. It has one of the largest numbers of Black residents compared to other big cities in the U. SA place where lots of people live and work, with buildings and streets. The police told Jenkins and Parker to leave Rankin County and go back to their side of the Pearl River.

    Opdyke’s lawyer Jeff Reynolds said on Wednesday that Opdyke was the first to admit what he did. On April 12, he gave investigators a WhatsApp conversation where the officers talked about their plan and what happened. If he had thrown his phone in a river like some other officers did, the investigators might not have found the secret messages.

    Reynolds also said that Opdyke was hurt in a sexual way when he was a child and saw the older deputies as father figures. That made him easily influenced by the bad behavior in the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office, Reynolds said.

    “When a new officer goes there, they start teaching people their beliefs,” Reynolds explained. “Where are the real leaders. Why aren’t they here in this court. ”

    On Tuesday, Elward’s lawyer also talked about a “culture of corruption” at the Sheriff’s Office.

    Dedmon and Opdyke, along with Elward, are getting punished after admitting to their part in attacking a white man in December. On January 4, 2022, which was a few weeks before Jenkins and Parker were hurt very badly. The victim’s name was revealed by prosecutors on Tuesday. His name is Alan Schmidt. Reynolds said Opdyke kept Schmidt from moving until Dedmon got there, but didn’t hurt him or touch him in a sexual way.

    Prosecutors read in court that Schmidt said Dedmon accused him of having stolen stuff when they were stopped by the police that night.

    The prosecutors said Elward and Opdyke did not stop Dedmon from hurting the victim. Dedmon punched and kicked the victim, used a Taser on the victim, shot a gun in the air to scare the victim, and then sexually assaulted the victim.

    Schmidt said Dedmon made him kneel down, took out his private part, and hit him in the face with it, trying to put it in his mouth. Dedmon then grabbed Schmidt’s private parts and rubbed against his body while he screamed for them to stop, Schmidt said.

    Schmidt said, “Who would do something so bad. They already have a lot of power over us, so they must be really sick in the head to behave this way. ”

    Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey, who started in 2012 and was elected again in November with no one running against him, did not give any information about why he fired his deputies last June. After they admitted they were guilty in August, Bailey said the officers had acted on their own and promised to improve the department. Jenkins and Parker want him to quit, and they are suing the department for $400 million.

  • Zambian player receives racial taunts from Lazio supporters

    Zambian player receives racial taunts from Lazio supporters

    Lameck Banda of Zambia and Samuel Umtiti of Lecce have both experienced racial taunts from visiting Lazio fans on Wednesday in Italy’s Serie A.

    According to the international media, reports the referee stopped the game in the second half because of the racist taunts.

    France international Umtiti was the primary target of the abuse.

    Lecce, who won 2-1, afterwards praised their fans for responding to the abuse by chanting Umtiti’s name.

    “The racist chants were submerged by those of encouragement,” the club said in a tweet.

    Source: BBC

  • Football fans chant racist abuse at French players

    Football fans in Qatar who are supporting Argentina, have been filmed chanting racist abuse targeted towards France’s national football team ahead of the World Cup.

    In the footage a group of men can be seen chanting that all the French players are from Angola while also referencing the Nigerian and Cameroonian heritage of some of the players.

    In one of the chants they make an explicit remark about star Kylian Mbappé, who plays for France and is of Cameroonian and Algerian heritage.

    After a few seconds, the fans making the insulting remarks are cut off by the TV reporter.

    Racism in football has been prevalent for many years, with black players receiving abuse whilst on the pitch and on social media.

    The World Cup in Qatar starts this weekend

    Source: BBC

  • Record label drops ‘robot rapper’ over alleged racial stereotyping criticism

    With more than 10 million TikTok followers and more than 570,000 monthly Spotify listeners, FN Meka is referred to as a “robot rapper not welcomed by this planet” on social media. It has temporarily made its 220,000-follower Instagram account private.

    After accusations that a “robot rapper” encouraged racist stereotypes, a record label dropped the rapper.

    Just days after announcing it had signed the computer-generated FN Meka, Capitol Music Group announced it had “severed ties” with the project and apologised to the black community for its “insensitivity” and lack of research.

    It comes after activist group Industry Blackout shared an open letter to the label, describing the augmented reality (AR) rapper as an “amalgamation of gross stereotypes” and a “careless abomination”.

    Posting the letter on social media, the group highlighted the use of the N-word and depictions of the rapper being beaten by a police officer.

    In a statement sent to Sky News, a spokesperson for Capitol said: “CMG has severed ties with the FN Meka project, effective immediately.

    “We thank those who have reached out to us with constructive feedback in the past couple of days – your input was invaluable as we came to the decision to end our association with the project.”

  • Mass shooting at Buffalo supermarket was a racist hate crime, police say

    The 18-year-old suspected of opening fire at a Buffalo supermarketSaturday told authorities he was targeting the Black community, according to an official familiar with the investigation.

    The alleged gunman made disturbing statements describing his motive and state of mind following his arrest, the official said. The statements were clear and filled with hate toward the Black community. Investigators also uncovered other information from search warrants and other methods indicating the alleged shooter was “studying” previous hate attacks and shootings, the official said.

    The revelation comes a day after a gunman killed 10 people and wounded three others at the Tops Friendly Markets store in a predominantly Black neighborhood in Buffalo. Eleven of the people who were shot were Black, officials said. The victims range in age from 20 to 86, police said.

    Buffalo police identified all 13 victims Sunday. Among them were a former police officer who tried to stop the shooter, the octogenarian mother of the city’s former fire commissioner and a long-term substitute teacher.

    Two people remain hospitalized in stable condition, a spokesman for Erie County Medical Center said Saturday night.

    The suspect was identified as Payton S. Gendron, a rifle-toting 18-year-old from Conklin, New York, who allegedly wrote a White supremacist manifesto online, traveled about 200 miles to the store and livestreamed the attack, authorities said.

    Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said Sunday the attack was a racist hate crime and will be prosecuted as such.
    “The evidence that we have uncovered so far makes no mistake that this is an absolute racist hate crime. It will be prosecuted as a hate crime,” he said. “This is someone who has hate in their heart, soul and mind.”

    People gather outside a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, where 10 people were killed on Saturday.

    People gather outside a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, where 10 people were killed on Saturday.
    Investigators believe the suspect acted on his own in the shooting, Gramaglia said. The suspect was in Buffalo a day before the shooting and did some reconnaissance at the Tops Friendly Markets store, the commissioner said.
    Gendron, the suspect, surrendered to police and was taken into custody. He was charged with first-degree murder, prosecutors said, and pleaded not guilty in court Saturday night, Buffalo City Court Chief Judge Craig Hannah told CNN.
    Erie County Sheriff John Garcia said Gendron is currently under suicide watch.
    On Sunday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced $2.8 million in federal and state funding for the victims and their families, according to a statemnt from her office.
    “The past 24 hours have been traumatizing for New Yorkers, and my administration will spare no effort to ensure the victims of this act of terrorism by a white supremacist are receiving all the resources and support they need,” Hochul said in the statement.
    “The entire world is watching how we will come together as New Yorkers to overcome this unthinkable tragedy. Buffalo, my hometown, is the City of Good Neighbors and New York State will be good neighbors for them.”
    New York State’s Office of Victim Services will be in Buffalo throughout the week to help administer funding and assist victims and families in obtaining financial assistance from the state, according to the statement.
    In addition, Hochul announced a partnership with rideshare services Uber and Lyft to provide transport to and from local grocery stores for affected community members.
    The grocery store company, Tops Markets, is also providing free transportation to members of the Buffalo community affected by the shooting “to ensure our neighbors are able to meet their grocery and pharmacy needs,” according to an update on Twitter from the grocery chain.
    “While the Tops location at Jefferson Avenue will remain closed until further notice, we are steadfast in our commitment to serving every corner of our community as we have for the past 60 years,” the statement reads. “Knowing the importance of this location and serving families on the east side of the city, we have taken immediate steps to ensure our neighbors are able to meet their grocery and pharmacy needs by providing free bus shuttle service starting today.”
    Saturday’s attack bears similarities to a number of mass shootings in recent years that were motivated by hate and intended to be seen online, including the shootings at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019.
    The Buffalo attack was the deadliest US mass shooting of the year. There have been at least 198 mass shootings so far in 2022, per the Gun Violence Archive, which — like CNN — defines a mass shooting as four or more people shot, not including the shooter.
    The owner of a firearms shop in New York told The New York Times that the suspect recently bought a Bushmaster assault weapon. A background check on the suspect at the time showed nothing, Donald told the Times.
    “I knew nothing about it until I got the call from them. I couldn’t believe it,” said Robert Donald, whose shop is in Endicott, about 200 miles from Buffalo.
    “I just can’t believe it. I don’t understand why an 18-year-old would even do this,” he added. “I know I didn’t do anything wrong, but I feel terrible about it.”

    Suspect targeted predominantly Black area

    Shooting suspect charged with murder in court appearance

    Investigators are reviewing a 180-page purported manifesto posted online in connection with the shooting. The author of the document, who claims to be Payton Gendron, confesses to the attack and describes himself as a fascist, a White supremacist and an anti-Semite.
    “We are obviously going through that with a fine-toothed comb and reviewing that for all evidence that may lead us to besides the manifesto itself,” Erie County District Attorney John Flynn told CNN’s Victor Blackwell.
    The manifesto’s author says he bought ammo for some time but didn’t get serious about planning the attack until January.
    The author writes about his perceptions of the dwindling size of the White population and claims White people are being replaced by non-Whites in a “White genocide.” This “replacement theory,” once a fringe idea, has recently become a talking point for Fox News’ host Tucker Carlson as well as other prominent conservatives.
    “We continue to investigate this case as a hate crime, a federal hate crime and as a crime perpetrated by a racially motivated, violent extremist,” said Stephen Belongia, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Buffalo field office.
    In the manifesto, the author says the supermarket in Buffalo is in a ZIP code that “has the highest black percentage that is close enough to where I live.”
    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul told CNN investigators believe the suspect targeted the busiest place in that area at the busiest time.
    “This was targeted by ZIP code,” Hochul said. “This was the highest concentration of African Americans within hours.”
    The ZIP code that includes the store, 14208, is 78% Black, according to the US Census Bureau’s 2020 American Community Survey. That is the highest percentage of Black population of any ZIP code in upstate New York.
    Hochul said an AR-15 used in the shooting was purchased legally in a gun store in New York state but was modified with a high-capacity magazine, which is not legal in the state.
    The suspected gunman had previously been on the radar of police, officials said.
    As a student at Susquehanna Valley Central High School, he made a “generalized threat” in June 2021, Gramaglia said. The student was brought in for a mental health evaluation and was released after a day and a half, according to Gramaglia.
    The threat was not racially motivated, he added. A spokesman for the New York State Police confirmed to CNN it investigated and responded to a report that a 17-year-old student had made “a threatening statement” in June 2021 at the same high school. The student was taken into custody and transported to a hospital in June 2021 for a mental health evaluation.
    State police were unable to confirm how long the individual was in the hospital or the findings of the evaluation. They also refused to name the 17-year-old.
    Earlier Sunday, Hochul said on ABC’s “This Week” the suspect had previously been under surveillance with medical authorities related to “something he wrote in high school.”
    In his hometown, the suspect worked at the local Conklin Reliable Market for about four months and left about three months ago, according to the store’s owner. The owner described him as very quiet, while a neighbor similarly said “you wouldn’t get more than a word or two” from him.

    How the shooting unfolded

    At around 2:30 p.m., the suspect drove to Tops Friendly Markets near the areas of Masten Park and Kingsley. Wearing tactical gear and armed with an assault weapon, the suspect allegedly shot and killed three people in the parking lot and wounded a fourth, according to a statement from Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn.
    The suspect then entered the store and exchanged gunfire with an armed security guard who was a retired member of the Buffalo Police Department, the district attorney said. The guard was identified as Aaron Salter, Brown said.
    Because the suspect wore heavy tactical gear, however, the guard’s bullets did not have any effect, Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said Saturday.
    “He was very heavily armed,” the police commissioner said. “He had tactical gear, he had a tactical helmet on, he had a camera that he was livestreaming what he was doing.”
    Inside the store, nine people were shot before the suspect was apprehended by police, according to the district attorney’s statement.
    In a statement sent to CNN, livestreaming service Twitch confirmed the shooting was streamed and said the user “has been indefinitely suspended from our service, and we are taking all appropriate action, including monitoring for any accounts rebroadcasting this content.”
    CNN obtained a portion of the livestream which showed the suspect arriving at the supermarket in his vehicle. CNN is not airing the video.
    People hug near the scene of the mass shooting at the Tops Friendly Markets store Saturday.

    Grady Lewis said he was outside the supermarket when he heard seven or eight gunshots and saw a White man dressed in tactical gear spraying gunfire at the entry of the store. Law enforcement arrived within two minutes after the shooting began, Lewis told CNN affiliate WKBW. He “heard at least 20 or so shots” before the suspect exited the store.
    “He came out, he put the gun to his head, to his chin. Then he dropped it and took off his bulletproof vest, then got on his hands and knees and put his hands behind his back,” Lewis said, describing the moments the suspect was arrested by police. “I thought they were going to shoot him but they didn’t shoot him.”
    “I still don’t even believe it happened … that a person would go into a supermarket full of people,” he said. “It was horrible, it was really horrible.”
    The Tops Friendly Markets store released a statement Sunday saying it was heartbroken over the violence. “Tops has been committed to this community and to the city of Buffalo for decades and this tragedy will not change that commitment,” the company said.
    Source: CNN